I was lucky enough to start getting into firewood hobby about 2 weeks ago having 12 acres and a 65 hp tractor figured I could start the side hustle. By complete luck which started this whole idea was my neighbor was having trees cut down so I went over and asked if I could have some wood, The tree company told me they would pay me $50 a load to take wood so I partnered up with them I burn what I dont need and split good woods (avg 2-3 loads a day). My job give awards ($500 gift cards) so I was able to get a log splitter with those gift cards. I haven't started selling yet however I have roughly 20,000 lbs of wood split or ready to be split hoping to get this rolling.
@@camlynn5314 so far so good with minimal time invested due to my job I have made roughly 2600 since post. Definitely a lot of work but being on my own property I enjoy it! Now this is mostly wood loads and roughly 400 in wood sales
So far so good I’ve made roughly 8500 just in wood loads and around 3-4 k in sales I haven’t advertised but once on fb marketplace and was able to get repeat business. Being a side hustle I haven’t spent much time in effort in this so the roi is pretty good for me!
Sore elbows is from cutting, not splitting. I split using a maul and for the big trunks I use spikes. I need to get a trailer and splitter. I’ve made a extra 3k since summer, just doing it in my spare time bc I enjoy it
Out of all the interviews I see it drives me nuts when they start answering the question before it’s finished being asked. Don’t interrupt! This was such a breath of fresh air. I can see why people want to buy from him. He just gives an aura of respect and I’m sure he delivers exactly what he promises. Wish him all the success! You’re awesome man!
Don't wait until you're 70y.o. and in poor health. After a severe work related injury at 58, I found out full recovery wasn't in my future. It took almost a decade to regain enough mobility just to get outside and enjoy a little light work. I took that to heart and kept pushing toward improvement. Long story short, We supplement heat with firewood and I enjoy doing for myself. in a matter of months I moved from an axe(I had trouble even swinging) to a Huskee Splitter. Picked up a few different chainsaws on the cheap(no income/savings) budgeting my Social Security funds. Repurposed an old 4x8 trailer and I was off to the races. I only sell if someone ask for some wood and I've donated a bit to neighbors in need. My goal is healthy exercise and preparation for that time when I can no longer handle the hard work. Currently We have about 7 cords split and another 8 cut into rounds waiting to be split and staked. .......unfortunately it has been Rain, rain, rain so far this spring.
Great video. Ive started on this road myself. I get paid to cut the trees down and clear the land though which pays alot more than the firewood. Im still planning to keep and sell the wood bevause i can do it in my down time.
$120 a face cord I'm assuming this is in the US, that's high. In my market in south western Ontario Canada, the average is probably $90 CAD plus delivery fee in rural areas. Big urban areas probably $100 CAD. Wish I could sell my firewood for that price.
As someone who has a timberwolf tw5($11-12,000) splitter, that thing makes mine look mid to homeowner grade. That thing is awesome but definitely not cheap for startup costs
When I bout my prop it was timbered. So I kept some and sold some. It's totally about where you live. How much you can get per cord. But overall I can say there's no moneyin firewood. Very hard backbreaking work. Very time consuming. In conn , mass or n j maybe 300 or 400 per cord. Here in NY at 200 per cord for get it. I'm keeping the last 30 cord I have for myself. To really make any money in it you need to spend around 200 k just to get started in it . Not worth it from my experience.
Make 400$ a full cord I can get 2 in a day with some help make 350$ in a day with all the other expenses including gas and pay for the other folks. Just all depends
What is the measurement for a cord of wood ?? I once knew 60 + years ago but can’t find 😊 Happy seeing you making a honest living and enjoying your life and family ❤
So much of what you say I just love! I started a firewood business two years ago because my normal job (teacher) had me inside all the time and I love working outdoors. Like you, my elbows hurt, my back hurts and I lose a fingernail every now and again, but something about it is just reviving for me. I've been considering putting out a firewood stand - biggest problem, I can't use my own property - too far out and I'm on the end of a long gravel road. Do you have any suggestions on how to get a firewood stand where it is more visible and what kind of deal would be appropriate with that land owner?
This is a great video. I’m thinking very seriously about doing this. Also I’d be interested in knowing what your full time job is behind the computer. Just out of curiosity.
Love the story! I'd like to get into the firewood business as a side hustle, but I don't think it would be worth it in my area. I see cords delivered for about $200 here. By the time you source it, haul it, buck it, split it, stack it, and deliver it....I'd be in the hole.
I've come to the same conclusion. I'm just like this guy -- I sit behind a desk and would love to spend more time running my chainsaw and working outside, but when I run the numbers on selling firewood... yeah... there's no money in it. Cords here go for $100. That's a lot of work for $100! lol
@@OutdoorsWithChad It has been my experience that, generally speaking, when you see people selling a 'cord' of home firewood for $100 they are really selling a 'face cord' or 1/3 cord. 4'x8'x16" , roughly one well stacked full-size pickup bed (and that goes for closer to $200 stacked in my area). A full cord would be 4'x8'x4'. The term cord has taken on different sizes depending on region and residential vs commercial industry. There would be profit in face cords for $100 if you sourced the wood from tree removal companies looking to dispose of it, but even with free wood I couldn't imagine anyone making their fuel payments at $100 for a full cord much less make a profit.
I am in UK and the prices stinking, i dont know how much a cord is but im guessing a trailer load will be £230+ which is 250 dollars+. Kiln dried ash, birch etc is over £300 a load.@@OutdoorsWithChad
That has always been as concern for me. For the first 2 years we sold pine/poplar at $280 (CDN) per cord. This year we were forced to bump it up to $330 because logs got a lot more expensive here. We are getting far less calls so far this year but charging less means we are working for free. Our price hike just covered what we pay for logs and we don't make a dine more. We sell out every year so we'll see what happens this year. People around us charge less because they aren't an official company and our quality is far better. The hope is that word of mouth kicks in and all will be good.
Just find a barn & property for rent for 200$ a month right next to a 200 site campground & you got a business. 😄😂 How were you not already doing this?
losing money stacking customer's wood. that time could be better spent doing more deliveries or splitting more wood. i could see stacking for a disabled/elderly perosn. that's a different story.
The video is not over yet but so what's your best wood that you sell what's the number one quality wood and what is the lowest quality wood what type of species of trees are there
love this guy so simple so calm talking,hard working he deserves it
I was lucky enough to start getting into firewood hobby about 2 weeks ago having 12 acres and a 65 hp tractor figured I could start the side hustle. By complete luck which started this whole idea was my neighbor was having trees cut down so I went over and asked if I could have some wood, The tree company told me they would pay me $50 a load to take wood so I partnered up with them I burn what I dont need and split good woods (avg 2-3 loads a day). My job give awards ($500 gift cards) so I was able to get a log splitter with those gift cards. I haven't started selling yet however I have roughly 20,000 lbs of wood split or ready to be split hoping to get this rolling.
Your are a lucky guy have a great Sunday 👍
How has it been going?
@@camlynn5314 so far so good with minimal time invested due to my job I have made roughly 2600 since post. Definitely a lot of work but being on my own property I enjoy it! Now this is mostly wood loads and roughly 400 in wood sales
An update on the hustle would be awesome!
So far so good I’ve made roughly 8500 just in wood loads and around 3-4 k in sales I haven’t advertised but once on fb marketplace and was able to get repeat business. Being a side hustle I haven’t spent much time in effort in this so the roi is pretty good for me!
Sore elbows is from cutting, not splitting. I split using a maul and for the big trunks I use spikes. I need to get a trailer and splitter. I’ve made a extra 3k since summer, just doing it in my spare time bc I enjoy it
Out of all the interviews I see it drives me nuts when they start answering the question before it’s finished being asked. Don’t interrupt! This was such a breath of fresh air. I can see why people want to buy from him. He just gives an aura of respect and I’m sure he delivers exactly what he promises. Wish him all the success! You’re awesome man!
Great dad thinking about his daughters
Based on the time, energy, work, fuel, delivery, etc...cords of wood should cost $750 each. Your average person has no idea what it takes.
Love your video. I have always loved the idea of selling firewood too. Recently bought a 40 ton splitter for my home and it gets me thinking
Good job Eric and daughters. Keep it up guys!
Respect to you sir. Hard work. Hope you all the success in the world in building up your side business.
Don't wait until you're 70y.o. and in poor health.
After a severe work related injury at 58, I found out full recovery wasn't in my future. It took almost a decade to regain enough mobility just to get outside and enjoy a little light work. I took that to heart and kept pushing toward improvement.
Long story short, We supplement heat with firewood and I enjoy doing for myself. in a matter of months I moved from an axe(I had trouble even swinging) to a Huskee Splitter. Picked up a few different chainsaws on the cheap(no income/savings) budgeting my Social Security funds. Repurposed an old 4x8 trailer and I was off to the races.
I only sell if someone ask for some wood and I've donated a bit to neighbors in need. My goal is healthy exercise and preparation for that time when I can no longer handle the hard work.
Currently We have about 7 cords split and another 8 cut into rounds waiting to be split and staked.
.......unfortunately it has been Rain, rain, rain so far this spring.
Grind on brother. You got what it takes 🤙
WOW!!! So nice to see Girl Dad's empowering their daughters from an early age!!!!
Ever think of making a log splitter with a double ended cylinder? Same HP and pump requirements but split wood on the extension and retract
It's cool that you also use the smaller branches too, minimal waste. Good on you man 👍
Great video. Ive started on this road myself. I get paid to cut the trees down and clear the land though which pays alot more than the firewood. Im still planning to keep and sell the wood bevause i can do it in my down time.
Great job. But man...at 3:50....bucking up a log with no ear or ear pro? Would hate to see you lose an eye when something catastrophic goes wrong.
The hardest work most people will ever do.
Thank you LumberJills!
$120 a face cord I'm assuming this is in the US, that's high. In my market in south western Ontario Canada, the average is probably $90 CAD plus delivery fee in rural areas. Big urban areas probably $100 CAD. Wish I could sell my firewood for that price.
150 face cord here in California. 400 a cord.... oak, almond, cherry.
Western NY it is about $65-$80 a facecord
It can be up to 400$ cad depending where you live, it’s about 250$-350$ here
Edit: I’m in bc where gas is expensive
250 to 300 a choard split pine .
Oh shit, you're local to me, had no idea, thats awesome.
As someone who has a timberwolf tw5($11-12,000) splitter, that thing makes mine look mid to homeowner grade. That thing is awesome but definitely not cheap for startup costs
I would love to see something about balloon twisting business. I own Balloons by Gary
Lmfao
Great work my man! Crazy inspirational! Only thing I didn’t hear was how they’re dried ?
When I bout my prop it was timbered. So I kept some and sold some. It's totally about where you live. How much you can get per cord. But overall I can say there's no moneyin firewood. Very hard backbreaking work. Very time consuming. In conn , mass or n j maybe 300 or 400 per cord. Here in NY at 200 per cord for get it. I'm keeping the last 30 cord I have for myself. To really make any money in it you need to spend around 200 k just to get started in it . Not worth it from my experience.
Yeah, we don't get even close to $200/cord here, but even at that, cutting/splitting a cord of firewood is a ton of work for $200 lousy bucks.
Just saying you do not need no 200k I started under 10k and a day job
Make 400$ a full cord I can get 2 in a day with some help make 350$ in a day with all the other expenses including gas and pay for the other folks. Just all depends
Step 1 have land.
Step two have a chainsaw,, lol
Step 4 buy pick up truck
@@Afthanomstep 5 profit.
Step 5 buy a log splitter
Step 6 buy fuel
What is the measurement for a cord of wood ?? I once knew 60 + years ago but can’t find 😊
Happy seeing you making a honest living and enjoying your life and family ❤
4' L x 8' W x 4' H = 128 cubic feet
What brand is your new splitter?
Great workers you have Brother
So much of what you say I just love! I started a firewood business two years ago because my normal job (teacher) had me inside all the time and I love working outdoors. Like you, my elbows hurt, my back hurts and I lose a fingernail every now and again, but something about it is just reviving for me. I've been considering putting out a firewood stand - biggest problem, I can't use my own property - too far out and I'm on the end of a long gravel road. Do you have any suggestions on how to get a firewood stand where it is more visible and what kind of deal would be appropriate with that land owner?
Great stuff Lumber Jill's
Great video! What is your new splitter?
This is a great video. I’m thinking very seriously about doing this. Also I’d be interested in knowing what your full time job is behind the computer. Just out of curiosity.
Love the story! I'd like to get into the firewood business as a side hustle, but I don't think it would be worth it in my area. I see cords delivered for about $200 here. By the time you source it, haul it, buck it, split it, stack it, and deliver it....I'd be in the hole.
You are lucky to get it for 200$
I've come to the same conclusion. I'm just like this guy -- I sit behind a desk and would love to spend more time running my chainsaw and working outside, but when I run the numbers on selling firewood... yeah... there's no money in it. Cords here go for $100. That's a lot of work for $100! lol
@@OutdoorsWithChad It has been my experience that, generally speaking, when you see people selling a 'cord' of home firewood for $100 they are really selling a 'face cord' or 1/3 cord. 4'x8'x16" , roughly one well stacked full-size pickup bed (and that goes for closer to $200 stacked in my area). A full cord would be 4'x8'x4'. The term cord has taken on different sizes depending on region and residential vs commercial industry. There would be profit in face cords for $100 if you sourced the wood from tree removal companies looking to dispose of it, but even with free wood I couldn't imagine anyone making their fuel payments at $100 for a full cord much less make a profit.
I am in UK and the prices stinking, i dont know how much a cord is but im guessing a trailer load will be £230+ which is 250 dollars+. Kiln dried ash, birch etc is over £300 a load.@@OutdoorsWithChad
That has always been as concern for me. For the first 2 years we sold pine/poplar at $280 (CDN) per cord. This year we were forced to bump it up to $330 because logs got a lot more expensive here. We are getting far less calls so far this year but charging less means we are working for free. Our price hike just covered what we pay for logs and we don't make a dine more. We sell out every year so we'll see what happens this year.
People around us charge less because they aren't an official company and our quality is far better. The hope is that word of mouth kicks in and all will be good.
New subscriber Good video enjoy it Be watching again Stay safe and stay healthy And have a good day
I like this dude already. I could drink beer with him an chat next to fire pit from his wood.
Great ideas and video
What’s the name of that book he’s talking about I want I want to get that book
I think it's called Norwegian Wood by Lars Mytting. I totally want it, too.
How would you suggest I go about contacting a state park to supply their wood? I currently live next door to a MI state park
Just find a barn & property for rent for 200$ a month right next to a 200 site campground & you got a business. 😄😂 How were you not already doing this?
30 thousand side hustle shit here in the uk i earn 12 thousand pound a year so about 14k dollars that would be my main hustle 😂
jeeez thats peanuts,what do you do to earn so little?
losing money stacking customer's wood. that time could be better spent doing more deliveries or splitting more wood. i could see stacking for a disabled/elderly perosn. that's a different story.
I would have an upcharge for stacking. Otherwise, it's all dumped.
As someone who makes all their own fire wood, making fire wood as a side hustle would be a pass. Way to labour intensive.
That chwrry he was cutting up would be worth more as a log to make lumber out of.
Step 1 cut all your wood during summer!
Guy sounds like jesse james.
Thx for sharing
hi there interesting show , best to all john
Step 1: have land, professional machinery, trailers, and transportation equipment
I have 20 acres i guess i should buy an axe and get started....
Where u at I wanna come get truck loads
I have two axes... 👀
This dude is awesome
Free dead trees are everywhere for free
if this man goes rogue we're all screwed, did u see the way he sliced that dang wood?
lol its easy when dad got land already
Rad!
Quick question why not just use the chainsaw to cut it in 4 pieces
chainsaws are only made to cross cut.
The video is not over yet but so what's your best wood that you sell what's the number one quality wood and what is the lowest quality wood what type of species of trees are there
✌
$120 a face cord. $50 here.
He is cute.
step one buy a forest
Oh nice so a blend for me would probably be madrone log Oak and Pine
Stap 1 have money
Obviously a exaggeration of what you can make I am sorry but I have a 8000sq building
well first off, you dont split with an axe, you use a maul. what type of wood are we talking about here?
Step 1 have land worth 100k lmao
15-30k is poverty
Side Hustle🤔
Poor is the new rich good clean work/fun in my opinion kick butt my friend good luck going to try a stand myself
thats on top of his desk job tho
Nice drop start
So out here in Northern California Monterey County I would say our top quality would be madrone lowest quality Pine.