@@thefirewooddoctor It feels fun catching a channel kind of at the very beginning. I atarted watching six months ago , and if he started a year ago then i was close!
Good information Chris you tell them guys that don't sell much and are giving us a bad name for us that do it the right way. I want people to know that there are guys out here that do it the right way. Let's keep our customers happy with the good firewood. Goodnight Irene
Recently started heating with wood, and yeah you guys are right, there are a ton of snake oil salesmen out there! So bad I decided I'm cutting my own wood from now on. Even if I can only get cheap pine. Dry CHEAP pine will burn better than wet OVERPRICED hardwood. Now I'm toying with the idea of starting my own business, starting the same way you did Chris. Split 10-20 extra cords with my maul and see how it goes. There's obviously a demand for honest hardworking men in this area.
Working on it! I have only been at this for a year and I do not have any girls in yoga pants and tight shirts prancing around, so... maybe I'll put some on and start prancing!! HA!
That sounds great, I had a bunch of the blue light weight ones and they busted up in the winter because they are brittle when cold. The heavy black ones are great though!
Storing my wood on pallets and in the open, once dry it goes into the wood shed and and along the outside....where it is still getting sun and almost always the wind is hitting it. Another good video Chris.....
Good morning Chris!!😀😀 Years ago I was talking with some old times and they claimed that the rows should be stacked north and south so both sides of the stack get the Sunshine. If you stack it east and west when the sun gets lower in the sky. The north side of the stack doesn't get any direct sunlight and dosen't dry as fast. That's why when we used to shock grain for thrashing we always built the shocks north and south. If you made them east and west the north side wouldn't dry out enough to put it through the thrashing machine. So I always try to stack my wood north and south. Take care my friend!!😀😀 Logger Al
Chris, I've been around firewood as far back as I can remember and all your information is 100% correct. Sadly, I am surrounded by idiot neighbors who think they can cut a tree down on Monday, let it sit until Friday, cut and split it over the weekend and burn it the next week... I believe in the 3 year plan. What I cut this year, waits 2 more years to burn. My neighbors think my wood is TOO dry and it will cause chimney fires.. LOL when I burn my truly dry wood the chimney will have only a light coating of dusty ash, not the glossy hard creosote like my neighbors have. I stack on pallets, top cover only, and try to stack only 2 rows deep... My neighbors say my wood will "rot" because it's been sitting so long. I've tried to educate them, but they won't listen. I do firewood for myself, I have more than enough. I'd like to get in the business, but the prices for face and full cords around Hayward, WI are so low that I could never sell my hard work that cheap. Thank you for all the great videos!
Thanks for the background info. My brother Ken lives in the sticks by Park Falls and he sells hundreds of cords a year, so I know you can too, the cottage people want and need delivery, so you might want to try that! Good luck!
Morning Chris, you sure have been on a information roll lately, good stuff, I should consider myself lucky I store my wood on “rock-rock” haha. Have a good weekend
I'm in the deep south US. All our firewood is oak of some variety. Mostly Red Oak, Water Oak, occasional Live Oak and White Oak. Split, stacked, under a roof, but in the shade 80% of the time, only in the summer. It takes 2.5 yrs to get right. Sometimes soon as 2 yrs for small pieces, but 3 yrs is usually perfect. In a year, it's still wet and will just smoke and turn into a charred mess. As the OP mentions, sun is critical.
Winter is my favorite time to season my wood. Because of climate change, we get like two days of snow in the winter here in Delaware, plenty of time to stack wood for the next season. The wind gets aggressive during the winter and there's zero humidity. That zero humidity is key to getting wood dry when there's little sun. Summer here is a humid swamp, I hate it.
I have been stacking for years.. If I was selling secession wood like you in the fall and winter I would cover it but since it's green I dont see a point in covering my firewood at this time. Good information Chris.. See you tomorrow..
Agree with all your drying points Chris. But for those of us who cut to burn and heat in the winter-#1-store wood as close to the burning appliance as feasible. Easier fetching sticks in inclement winter-and less dragging snow/ice/dirt into the house. Just sayin😊
Chris is the voice of experience. Get your 🪵 off the ground, split and stacked in rows where the sun and wind can speed the drying process….out in the open for three seasons and covered in winter…get more wood…keep cutting and stacking you’ll be toasty 🔥🪵😁
Skidder kev told me that they dont put pallets below their mountains cuz they scoop it with the skid steer, the pallets would be in the way, for those who do wood for their own use I'd recommend making a layer of pallets and just throw it there, that's what I'll try next year.
The one thing I started doing this year is putting my pallets up on bricks to keep them from rotting. I have 6 yr old rows where the pallets have almost rotted away, & the bottom layer of firewood show signs of deterioration too.
Stack it anywhere it can get sun and a breeze. I finally got the person I'm renting from to agree to cut down a few trees so have more room to stack and store inventory. Right now I pretty much need logs that are ready to burn RIGHT NOW! A side benefit to taking out the trees is can move the wood more out of the way so the snowplow guy won't habe to pile up snow where my logs/wood are stacked. Plus will finally have the room to cut a stack of logs, then split, then stack like you do. Soon I'll be shutting down my 8ft racks for sale, changing that to delivery only. Need to gey some cutting done today so don't have so much to do tomorrow. Saturday afternoon I'll be able to see my favorite Packer from the 90s, GILBERT BROWN, THE GRAVE DIGGER!
Would you ever consider doing a spotlight “Show me your Wood Yard” segment every so often to let your viewers see how others are set up for their firewood? Just a thought 💭 not sure how much work incorporating the pictures or short video segments would be.
The wood i cut this winter is for next year, i try to stay a year ahead. I split mine down to the size of a football or so. Pure green wood gets stacked outside, and standing dead goes in the wood shed.
Should I cover the wood I have out in the middle of the field on pallets over the winter? I am in East Tennessee and hardly ever get snow. West Knoxville area.
Hey, when taking down aspen you should girdle the tree first until it is dead, most of the time you wont get problems with those root sprouts if you do it like that :)
wow . !! very good . i grew up and my dad would go to a place and get hard wood ashe . and we always accross our back yard in full sun .{{{{ ALSO B4 STACKING UP , MAKING THE BASE RAISED UP ABOUT A FOOT 4 AIR MOVEMENT. }}} the wood , he got was by the pickup truck . . and generally was about 3 or 3.5 feeet long . .
What is better is stacking the wood 3 x 3 like a jenga tower, provided one has the space as this way takes more room. Wood dries in winter too, but too much snow/ thaw cycles inhibit drying significantly in this season
Yes more space and air flow will dry your wood faster for sure. For me I need to have the wood measured so I stack in face cords and full cords with space between the rows.
4:34 - "whatever size you cut your wood..." I'll tell you; as close as humanly possible to 330mm long. 2 reasons - 3 rows makes pretty close to a metre, making my stack volumes easy to figure, and my woodheater firebox happens to be 365mm deep internally, meaning I can fit it in end on with the amount of room to burn right...👍😁🇦🇺
your wood does look nice and grey all stacked up, i just can’t justify it, i do like that guy you mentioned, skidder kev, my yard is covered in 1-3” clean concrete with french drain runs under it all to wick water away and i just climb on top with an excavator and flip it over now and then, to me it’s up to the buyer to be prepared and get the wood early and get it stacked.
@@InTheWoodyard probably about a 100’x200’, probably have about a100 tons in that area, oversized clean crushed concrete was about 10.00/ton 4-5 years ago, think it’s about 12-13.00/ton now, my yard is about a acre and a half and with the 300’ long road going back in the woods to it, i probably have 250 tons of the recycled concrete total, so a couple thousand dollars.
Great video. I stack mine in the open east to west no trees around. Great for drying is right! How many cords do you stay ahead for the next year? Its wood chucking time!
Hey Chris, two questions: we had a windfall of 6 or 8 tons of cottonwood from a huge dead tree. Is cottonwood worth splitting and curing for firewood? We won't need it anytime soon but it's a lot of work if we want to keep it. Also do you have any problems with pests nesting in the wood piles?
You can spray those weeds down without chemicals poisoning the ground. Vinegar, salt, and dish soap. It kills any plant it touches. Yeah a little salt goes onto the dirt, but it's not dumping straight salt at least. And you're using the spots for wood , so it'll dilute out after several rains. It mostly kills the foliage.
I wonder if it would be best to dry wood in stacks and when it gets to 20% or less, move it to a covered container, like a used sea can, to keep it dry. Especially in the winter. More work, yes, but then it frees up more ground for stacking more wood for drying. 🤔
@@InTheWoodyard Yep, you are very right. Hmm. I guess that the wire corn crib might be the best compromise, all around. The concrete pad to set it on would need to be two inches higher in the center, than the edges, to properly drain any moisture away.
I know someone who mad one and found that the drying results where the same as stacked rows. HOWEVER, they look cool! BUT, they take a bunch more time to make.
Question: I've seen a few videos on stacking firewood in the "Holz Hausen" round woodpile style... People say it dries faster that the 'standard' way of stacking wood... Have you ever tested this method??
Woodshed to outside open drying for me…jury is still out. My wood shed is all enclosed concrete floor with a ceiling fan running 24/7. Read somewhere that wood starts to really release moisture over 90*F. Everyone knows how hot an in closed steel pole shed gets. I have 9 full cords stacked in there every year. As sun hits and heats up shed, wood releases moisture, ceiling fan blows it around and it vents away. Basically setup as a dimensional lumber kiln. 95% red oak.
Good Evening Chris, love your videos, look forward to them every night. Do you offer green firewood at a lower price and an option for customers to pick up instead of you delivering? Do you offer other lengths as well? I live in Maine and I sell around 500 full cord every year. There's alot of firewood suppliers within a 50 mile radius of where I live so what makes me stand out is I offer custom lengths and the option for customers to pick up their firewood and purchase green firewood at a slightly lower price. Just wondering if you offered anything like that? Keep the videos coming. Thank you
Those are all good things to do for your customers, you are filling their wants and needs, that is a good thing! Wow, 500 full cords is great! Way to go Jon! Thanks for watching!
Getting the wood wet again or keeping it wet is what causes rot. Aspen, cotton wood, birch, box elder, soft maple, all rot fast when wet or on the ground. Oak, locust, cedar, tamarack last a long time, but not forever.
So i get my wood, 9 cord, in march, stack it, and tarp it, stacked on pallets, and gaps in between. Leave it till first of october and put it in the basement...its all stacked in a wide open area like yours, not super dry, theres a little thatvwasnt covered, dry as a corck..deft not, tarping nextbyear
It looks cool but why? I have talked to people who moisture tested a comparison between row stacking vs. holz hausen and it was a tie. So go for it for the looks and send me some pictures!
@@InTheWoodyard that’s ok I laughed at all the things I thought you two might say and all the things I might comment on. Get our selves in trouble pretty easily. Any way have a great day and go take a picture or something
HOW TO FIND NUMBER OF CORDS IN ANY SIZE RELATIVELY SQUARE STACK OF FIREWOOD Use a calculator. 1. Measure the stack in inches. Inches Wide or Deep X Inches Tall or High X Inches Long = a big number. Example: 36 in wide X 69 in tall X 156 in long = 387,504 cu inches. 2. Now divide 387,504 by 1728, (cubic inches in a cubic foot) = 224.25. 3. Now divide 224.25 by 128, (cubic feet in a cord of wood) = 1.75 cords of firewood.
Chris, love your videos! I have done some cutting, splitting and selling over the years but not on a level anywhere close to you. I’m 73 years young now and can no longer function to a point where cutting wood is a reality. I have been wondering how people like yourself and so many others where it appears you do 90% or better of all the labor of cutting, splitting, stacking, Loading of the transport vehicles delivering and cleaning up, makes your back feel. Most of the time I see you, you’re bending over picking something up of substantial weight. I was in the construction business all of my life and can barely stand up and walk and I did nowhere as much bending over as you do. Seriously, how do you think your back is going to be later on in life when you call it quits?
I guess I am a freak because the more I move the better I feel. My back is my strongest part, I am not real strong, quite average actually, but I just keep moving. I do not work at firewood all day every day so I do have days of recovery and days of not huge work so I hope to keep at this for years to come. Thanks for you concern Walter!
@@InTheWoodyard My back is not my strongest part. I feel WAY better when I use it (without being stupid). My worst days involve Dorito's and a couch...
They will be coming soon, right now I have a bunch more stacking to do and the latest videos are usually shot on days when I am working 12-14 hours a day on my other business, so I do not have a lot of time.I have another load of logs on order and I will use the grapple for them. Thanks John!
In my open area the sun hits the sides starting at 6:30 am until noon every day and the other side from noon until sunset at 8:30, so the sun hits the sides too, at least in my wood yard, maybe it is different where you are.
These last several videos are a master class on operating a firewood business. They are worthy of their own play list.
That is a good idea, I will do that!
Have you seen Chris's early videos? Talks about what you need to start a firewood business. Learned a ton from him over the past year.
@@thefirewooddoctor I just went back and watched the first 3 or 4. They are good too and pretty much the same information as the most recent 4 videos.
@@bwillan, I found Chris when searching "start a firewood business" nearly a year ago, shortly after he started uploading videos.
@@thefirewooddoctor
It feels fun catching a channel kind of at the very beginning. I atarted watching six months ago , and if he started a year ago then i was close!
Good information Chris you tell them guys that don't sell much and are giving us a bad name for us that do it the right way. I want people to know that there are guys out here that do it the right way. Let's keep our customers happy with the good firewood. Goodnight Irene
Thanks John, the people who have a bad product are my best salesman.
Recently started heating with wood, and yeah you guys are right, there are a ton of snake oil salesmen out there! So bad I decided I'm cutting my own wood from now on. Even if I can only get cheap pine. Dry CHEAP pine will burn better than wet OVERPRICED hardwood. Now I'm toying with the idea of starting my own business, starting the same way you did Chris. Split 10-20 extra cords with my maul and see how it goes. There's obviously a demand for honest hardworking men in this area.
Chris I don’t understand why you don’t have more subscribers? I have learned so much on your channel. Thanks for all the good advice.
Working on it! I have only been at this for a year and I do not have any girls in yoga pants and tight shirts prancing around, so... maybe I'll put some on and start prancing!! HA!
Another Great video Chris!! My horses knocked over a pile. Now to restock. Have a Safe Day
Sorry to hear that, I hate restacking!
When you said you had years of experience and knew a lot but not everything .
I subscribed 😎😎😎
Thanks, the older I get the more I realize I do not know very much.
Spot on with all the tips! Well done.
Glad it was helpful!
Another great informational video!
Thanks for watching!
thanks for the tips, been burning wood for 5 years and learned many dos and donts over that time
Glad to help, the more you do it the more you will learn, good luck Drew!
Good job Chris 👍👍
Thanks Jeremiah!
Good morning from Piqua Ohio. I found it endless supply of plastic pallets! The heavy duty ones. I'm going to set up 2 full chords, on those pallets.
Great score on the HD plastic pallets.
That sounds great, I had a bunch of the blue light weight ones and they busted up in the winter because they are brittle when cold. The heavy black ones are great though!
Yup!
Storing my wood on pallets and in the open, once dry it goes into the wood shed and and along the outside....where it is still getting sun and almost always the wind is hitting it. Another good video Chris.....
Thanks Tom!
@@InTheWoodyard Thank you Cris a lot of folks need the information your providing.
Good morning Chris!!😀😀
Years ago I was talking with some old times and they claimed that the rows should be stacked north and south so both sides of the stack get the Sunshine. If you stack it east and west when the sun gets lower in the sky. The north side of the stack doesn't get any direct sunlight and dosen't dry as fast.
That's why when we used to shock grain for thrashing we always built the shocks north and south. If you made them east and west the north side wouldn't dry out enough to put it through the thrashing machine. So I always try to stack my wood north and south.
Take care my friend!!😀😀
Logger Al
Yes that makes sense, that would be ideal. Thanks Al!
Great tips Chris, before the cold and snow starts falling, without any excuses. Let the sun shine😎
Thanks Al, yup, get busy cuttin!
Enjoyed the last few videos, a lotta good info! BTW, I picked up a 500i today.
Thanks, WOW....a 500i is a very nice saw! Have fun!
Your piles are huge thats what gets me motivated to chop and buck and stack
Thanks, the new wood yard has lots more that video was 2 1/2 years ago. You might want to see some of the new videos.
Your channel is completely awesome! Other Firewood channels just can’t compare. Keep posting!
Wow, thanks Bryan, I plan on being here for a long time!
Pretty good advice Chris
Thanks Barry!
Great series of videos! Thanks.
Glad you like them John!
All good info Chris.
You are a wood guru.
Drying and keeping it dry is different.
Thanks Mike!
💥 When I was a kid working with my dad he called me a pilot. He would chop the wood and I would pilot. 😂
*Keep on tractoring!* #ARITTERBITWILLDO
That's awesome, I am going to steal that!!!
You want to dry your wood get married lol , happy Friday Chris .
OUCH!!!!!! It sounds like you might have a problem Richie!!!! HA!
no problem shes gone for 20yrs the big dee thats a another story lol
Chris, I've been around firewood as far back as I can remember and all your information is 100% correct. Sadly, I am surrounded by idiot neighbors who think they can cut a tree down on Monday, let it sit until Friday, cut and split it over the weekend and burn it the next week... I believe in the 3 year plan. What I cut this year, waits 2 more years to burn. My neighbors think my wood is TOO dry and it will cause chimney fires.. LOL when I burn my truly dry wood the chimney will have only a light coating of dusty ash, not the glossy hard creosote like my neighbors have. I stack on pallets, top cover only, and try to stack only 2 rows deep... My neighbors say my wood will "rot" because it's been sitting so long. I've tried to educate them, but they won't listen.
I do firewood for myself, I have more than enough. I'd like to get in the business, but the prices for face and full cords around Hayward, WI are so low that I could never sell my hard work that cheap.
Thank you for all the great videos!
Thanks for the background info. My brother Ken lives in the sticks by Park Falls and he sells hundreds of cords a year, so I know you can too, the cottage people want and need delivery, so you might want to try that! Good luck!
As always, good stuff Chris.
Have a great day my friend 👍🇺🇸
Thanks, you too Gary!
Been loving all the tips lately, thank you sir!
Glad you like them!
Morning Chris, you sure have been on a information roll lately, good stuff, I should consider myself lucky I store my wood on “rock-rock” haha. Have a good weekend
Thanks Mike, I make the videos just for you!
you are a firewood Expert
No, I just talk a lot! HA!
Great drying tips! One thing I’ve never heard you talk about is how you keep your weeds down in the woodyard. Do a video on that subject.
HA! I just shot that very video and it should be out in about a week or so!
I think there was a Polack creating enough hot air to blow those seeds around! Good stuff Christopher 👍🏻
You got that right! I am 1/2 Polish!
I have firewood envy 😎😎
All you need to do is cut as much as you can when you can and that will cure that! HA!
G’morning Chris. Again, tons of GREAT information ! Get back to work though ! Haha. I jest. GoodNightIrene
Thanks Corey, yes I need to get stacking!
You got it!! 👍🏻👍🏻GNI
Thanks Todd!
I'm in the deep south US. All our firewood is oak of some variety. Mostly Red Oak, Water Oak, occasional Live Oak and White Oak. Split, stacked, under a roof, but in the shade 80% of the time, only in the summer. It takes 2.5 yrs to get right. Sometimes soon as 2 yrs for small pieces, but 3 yrs is usually perfect. In a year, it's still wet and will just smoke and turn into a charred mess.
As the OP mentions, sun is critical.
Yup, air movement and sun are everything.
Everyone is going to be a pro after the lessons this week.
No, I think they will need to DO IT first, experience is a much better teacher. Thanks Harry!
Winter is my favorite time to season my wood. Because of climate change, we get like two days of snow in the winter here in Delaware, plenty of time to stack wood for the next season. The wind gets aggressive during the winter and there's zero humidity. That zero humidity is key to getting wood dry when there's little sun. Summer here is a humid swamp, I hate it.
We always have had weather and always will and it will change, again.
I have been stacking for years.. If I was selling secession wood like you in the fall and winter I would cover it but since it's green I dont see a point in covering my firewood at this time.
Good information Chris.. See you tomorrow..
Sounds great Daniel, I suppose out there everything is wet about 364 days a year! HA!
Agree with all your drying points Chris. But for those of us who cut to burn and heat in the winter-#1-store wood as close to the burning appliance as feasible. Easier fetching sticks in inclement winter-and less dragging snow/ice/dirt into the house. Just sayin😊
Very good point!!! Thanks!
Chris is the voice of experience. Get your 🪵 off the ground, split and stacked in rows where the sun and wind can speed the drying process….out in the open for three seasons and covered in winter…get more wood…keep cutting and stacking you’ll be toasty 🔥🪵😁
Well said! Thanks Man!
Good video thank you
Glad you enjoyed it!!
Skidder kev told me that they dont put pallets below their mountains cuz they scoop it with the skid steer, the pallets would be in the way, for those who do wood for their own use I'd recommend making a layer of pallets and just throw it there, that's what I'll try next year.
That makes sense, those big piles shed water because of the height and steep angle.
The one thing I started doing this year is putting my pallets up on bricks to keep them from rotting. I have 6 yr old rows where the pallets have almost rotted away, & the bottom layer of firewood show signs of deterioration too.
Yes, that is a great idea to help air flow too!
Will be much better prepared for next camping wood season. Should have time to do some welding, which I love doing almost as much as making firewood!
Sounds great! Get to it!
@@InTheWoodyard, am leaving work in a few minutes, straight to the woodyard from hauling another truckload of beer!
Stack it anywhere it can get sun and a breeze. I finally got the person I'm renting from to agree to cut down a few trees so have more room to stack and store inventory. Right now I pretty much need logs that are ready to burn RIGHT NOW! A side benefit to taking out the trees is can move the wood more out of the way so the snowplow guy won't habe to pile up snow where my logs/wood are stacked. Plus will finally have the room to cut a stack of logs, then split, then stack like you do. Soon I'll be shutting down my 8ft racks for sale, changing that to delivery only. Need to gey some cutting done today so don't have so much to do tomorrow. Saturday afternoon I'll be able to see my favorite Packer from the 90s, GILBERT BROWN, THE GRAVE DIGGER!
Thanks for the update Jeffery, tackle Gilbert for me!
Would you ever consider doing a spotlight “Show me your Wood Yard” segment every so often to let your viewers see how others are set up for their firewood? Just a thought 💭 not sure how much work incorporating the pictures or short video segments would be.
Yes I plan on doing just that in the future, thanks Man!
The wood i cut this winter is for next year, i try to stay a year ahead. I split mine down to the size of a football or so. Pure green wood gets stacked outside, and standing dead goes in the wood shed.
Yup, that sounds like a good plan Jon!
Good morning from Grand Forks
Hello there Dean!
🔥Good video! Thanks!,
Glad you liked it!
Should I cover the wood I have out in the middle of the field on pallets over the winter? I am in East Tennessee and hardly ever get snow. West Knoxville area.
If you do, just cover the top so it can breath and dry.
Hey, when taking down aspen you should girdle the tree first until it is dead, most of the time you wont get problems with those root sprouts if you do it like that :)
Good to know, I give it a try sometime!
wow . !! very good . i grew up and my dad would go to a place and get hard wood ashe . and we always accross our back yard in full sun .{{{{ ALSO B4 STACKING UP , MAKING THE BASE RAISED UP ABOUT A FOOT 4 AIR MOVEMENT. }}} the wood , he got was by the pickup truck . . and generally was about 3 or 3.5 feeet long . .
Sounds like you dad had a good system!
I stay about 2 to 3 years ahead on firewood..so it seasons pretty well
Yup, when it's yours you can and should do that.
What is better is stacking the wood 3 x 3 like a jenga tower, provided one has the space as this way takes more room. Wood dries in winter too, but too much snow/ thaw cycles inhibit drying significantly in this season
Yes more space and air flow will dry your wood faster for sure. For me I need to have the wood measured so I stack in face cords and full cords with space between the rows.
4:34 - "whatever size you cut your wood..." I'll tell you; as close as humanly possible to 330mm long. 2 reasons - 3 rows makes pretty close to a metre, making my stack volumes easy to figure, and my woodheater firebox happens to be 365mm deep internally, meaning I can fit it in end on with the amount of room to burn right...👍😁🇦🇺
That makes sense to me and sounds like it works good for you!
your wood does look nice and grey all stacked up, i just can’t justify it, i do like that guy you mentioned, skidder kev, my yard is covered in 1-3” clean concrete with french drain runs under it all to wick water away and i just climb on top with an excavator and flip it over now and then, to me it’s up to the buyer to be prepared and get the wood early and get it stacked.
Wow, a hard surface would be nice to have, how big is it and what did it cost?
@@InTheWoodyard probably about a 100’x200’, probably have about a100 tons in that area, oversized clean crushed concrete was about 10.00/ton 4-5 years ago, think it’s about 12-13.00/ton now, my yard is about a acre and a half and with the 300’ long road going back in the woods to it, i probably have 250 tons of the recycled concrete total, so a couple thousand dollars.
Great video. I stack mine in the open east to west no trees around. Great for drying is right! How many cords do you stay ahead for the next year? Its wood chucking time!
None, I have sold everything I cut each year and barely can keep even with sold supply.
I totally understand that and you do volumes more than me! I will let you know in next video why i cut firewood. Just a little behind.
Hey Chris, two questions: we had a windfall of 6 or 8 tons of cottonwood from a huge dead tree. Is cottonwood worth splitting and curing for firewood? We won't need it anytime soon but it's a lot of work if we want to keep it. Also do you have any problems with pests nesting in the wood piles?
All wood burns, try some, it will stink a lot at first, low BTUs, yes mice some times.
Ive had my wood tarped since march, and thebstuff outside thebtarped woodbis dryer, im not tarping mine next year, and it rained a lot, this summer
I do not cover until late fall before snow and ONLY cover the top!
If you place the wood on a flat corrigated galvanised roof it should dry fairly rapidly provided the roof is strong enough to support the weight
I will need enough for 200 full cords....
You can spray those weeds down without chemicals poisoning the ground. Vinegar, salt, and dish soap. It kills any plant it touches.
Yeah a little salt goes onto the dirt, but it's not dumping straight salt at least. And you're using the spots for wood , so it'll dilute out after several rains.
It mostly kills the foliage.
Thanks for the tip, that is a good one!
@@InTheWoodyard
No probs!
Split and stacked oak in my town is 475 a cord.
That is a really good price, where are you at?
To all of you new subscribers, go to Chris' first videos and binge watch. You will learn so much and they are very entertaining.
Thanks for that Harvey!
Right now I single stack because I have the room to do it.I hope to eventually run out of room and have to stack full cords.GNI
Yes single face cord rows would be ideal, easy to count and fast drying too.
Is underneath spruce and pine trees a good idea? Sigh at my first season lol
Sun and wind is the best, look for that!
stack mine against a bldg in IBC totes that are on pallets and it dries good.
Giving it some air and getting it off of the ground does help!
I wonder if it would be best to dry wood in stacks and when it gets to 20% or less, move it to a covered container, like a used sea can, to keep it dry. Especially in the winter. More work, yes, but then it frees up more ground for stacking more wood for drying. 🤔
Yes, that might be good, but, the container needs to breath for further drying. Thank Craig!
@@InTheWoodyard Yep, you are very right. Hmm. I guess that the wire corn crib might be the best compromise, all around. The concrete pad to set it on would need to be two inches higher in the center, than the edges, to properly drain any moisture away.
What are your thoughts on a Holz Hausen (round wood pile) ?
I know someone who mad one and found that the drying results where the same as stacked rows. HOWEVER, they look cool! BUT, they take a bunch more time to make.
Question: I've seen a few videos on stacking firewood in the "Holz Hausen" round woodpile style... People say it dries faster that the 'standard' way of stacking wood... Have you ever tested this method??
I have not but I know some one who has and there was no difference other than it taking a lot more time and looking cool.
You said 8 minutes in the video you commented you cut the aspin tree so you could make more shade lol!
OOOPS! I must have meant sun!
Woodshed to outside open drying for me…jury is still out. My wood shed is all enclosed concrete floor with a ceiling fan running 24/7. Read somewhere that wood starts to really release moisture over 90*F. Everyone knows how hot an in closed steel pole shed gets. I have 9 full cords stacked in there every year. As sun hits and heats up shed, wood releases moisture, ceiling fan blows it around and it vents away. Basically setup as a dimensional lumber kiln. 95% red oak.
That sounds really nice, send me some pictures! Thanks Garny, chrisinthewoodyard@gmail.com
can you store dry wood in a pole barn?
sure
Good Evening Chris, love your videos, look forward to them every night. Do you offer green firewood at a lower price and an option for customers to pick up instead of you delivering? Do you offer other lengths as well? I live in Maine and I sell around 500 full cord every year. There's alot of firewood suppliers within a 50 mile radius of where I live so what makes me stand out is I offer custom lengths and the option for customers to pick up their firewood and purchase green firewood at a slightly lower price. Just wondering if you offered anything like that? Keep the videos coming. Thank you
Those are all good things to do for your customers, you are filling their wants and needs, that is a good thing! Wow, 500 full cords is great! Way to go Jon! Thanks for watching!
Is there a wood that goes from dry to rotten fast. Such as you need to sell it as soon as it dries?
Getting the wood wet again or keeping it wet is what causes rot. Aspen, cotton wood, birch, box elder, soft maple, all rot fast when wet or on the ground. Oak, locust, cedar, tamarack last a long time, but not forever.
Where do you live? I live in indiana. What’s the best frame to go with?
Wisconsin, frame?
Ants are a problem in west with fir hemlock so stacking close to house not a good idea !
Yes that makes sense to me , we do not have problems with ants once the wood is cut and split.
Whats the most cords youve sold in 1 year??
200ish
are your pallets 4 feet wide?
Most of them are.
So i get my wood, 9 cord, in march, stack it, and tarp it, stacked on pallets, and gaps in between. Leave it till first of october and put it in the basement...its all stacked in a wide open area like yours, not super dry, theres a little thatvwasnt covered, dry as a corck..deft not, tarping nextbyear
Do not cover it. It needs to get air and sun!
@InTheWoodyard I only covered the top, and had the sides where I could flop over when it wasn't raining, deft not tarping this time, thanks
I know i have commented a lot, but, what if it rains a lot? Over the summer, wont matter?
If you get a lot of rain where you are cover the top.
I herd firewood might be illegal to transport a cross state line or county
In some states it might be.
I have 120 banna boxes of dry wood in the up stars of the gurage
that is a lot of moving of wood!
What about the “Holz Hausen” way of stacking?
It looks cool but why? I have talked to people who moisture tested a comparison between row stacking vs. holz hausen and it was a tie. So go for it for the looks and send me some pictures!
Chris please explain why you didn’t have this chat with Kenny? It would have been so funny. 😂
Maybe we will do some wood chats in the future. We are 3 1/2 hours apart so we don't see each other every day. Thanks Stan!
@@InTheWoodyard that’s ok I laughed at all the things I thought you two might say and all the things I might comment on. Get our selves in trouble pretty easily. Any way have a great day and go take a picture or something
HOW TO FIND NUMBER OF CORDS IN ANY SIZE RELATIVELY SQUARE STACK OF FIREWOOD
Use a calculator.
1. Measure the stack in inches.
Inches Wide or Deep X Inches Tall or High X Inches Long = a big number.
Example: 36 in wide X 69 in tall X 156 in long = 387,504 cu inches.
2. Now divide 387,504 by 1728, (cubic inches in a cubic foot) = 224.25.
3. Now divide 224.25 by 128, (cubic feet in a cord of wood) = 1.75 cords of firewood.
yup
A Wood-cicle… 🤣 Classic
Thanks!
Don't let that beautiful cherry get moldy 😂
Yes, it needs to get stacked asap!
Chris, love your videos! I have done some cutting, splitting and selling over the years but not on a level anywhere close to you. I’m 73 years young now and can no longer function to a point where cutting wood is a reality. I have been wondering how people like yourself and so many others where it appears you do 90% or better of all the labor of cutting, splitting, stacking, Loading of the transport vehicles delivering and cleaning up, makes your back feel. Most of the time I see you, you’re bending over picking something up of substantial weight. I was in the construction business all of my life and can barely stand up and walk and I did nowhere as much bending over as you do. Seriously, how do you think your back is going to be later on in life when you call it quits?
I guess I am a freak because the more I move the better I feel. My back is my strongest part, I am not real strong, quite average actually, but I just keep moving. I do not work at firewood all day every day so I do have days of recovery and days of not huge work so I hope to keep at this for years to come. Thanks for you concern Walter!
@@InTheWoodyard My back is not my strongest part. I feel WAY better when I use it (without being stupid). My worst days involve Dorito's and a couch...
What about small yards?
I am not sure what you are asking??
What do you do with your cookies ?
Boiler wood!
cookies . ??? lol lol
Yup! They burn too!
the gurage gets up to 100plus degrees
yes, but that is a lot of wood moving then!
👍👍👍
You must be at work tonight , "WORKING"!!
@@InTheWoodyard hahaha
looks like you need to cut dow bunch more trees so the firewood gets more sun and wind
I think I am done with that I need the rest of the trees for my other business.
👍
Thanks Tony!
Not sure why you're even talking about how to dry firewood as we all know it is the customers job to do the drying hahaha LOL 😂
Not in my wood yard, it is my job here.
@@InTheWoodyard👍👍👍
I am glad your wood is off the ground Chris baby nice job on your wood stack in it text me back buddy Chris baby God bless your family
Thanks a bunch Ralphy baby! Have a good day!
im thinking of buying an old ware house 1million squar feet if i can a ford one and if i can find one i would pack it with firewood
That would fit a lot of wood!
Where's the grapple videos??
They will be coming soon, right now I have a bunch more stacking to do and the latest videos are usually shot on days when I am working 12-14 hours a day on my other business, so I do not have a lot of time.I have another load of logs on order and I will use the grapple for them. Thanks John!
No touching! 👉
Yup, I now just dry in big bins!
Is Iren your wife?
She was my grandma, and it is the name of an old song.
Chis the sun only shining on the top , the top is dry only by the sun
In my open area the sun hits the sides starting at 6:30 am until noon every day and the other side from noon until sunset at 8:30, so the sun hits the sides too, at least in my wood yard, maybe it is different where you are.
I just burn my wood to get it dry, wtf are you doing waiting a whole year for your shit to dry?