Hey Adam, thanks for the recent video with Matt from The Firewood Guy of PA. Last week we drove 4 hours one way to pick up some kiln-dried firewood for our wood-burning stove. We had a great conversation with Matt and met some of his workers and extended family. Great business and great people. Thanks again for featuring his firewood business.
Adam, here is an idea I use put 36 in or wide mining belt down. On the ends, use 1/2 in wood paddle bit and drive 2 stakes with welded washes to hold. It's so easy to clean...
Advertising the moisture level is a great idea. You will educate your clients; it is quantifiable; and you might find (as I did) that leaving wood in the sun and wind (with just the top covered in the winter) seasons wood better than if it is away from warmth and wind. This is what works in Maine, anyway.
Good morning Adam: Your setup and workflow under the roof appear neat and efficient. As your wood processing increases and becomes routine, I suggest installing bollards at the outside corners for protection of the tin siding, and marking the wood posts with high visible color markers for safety.
Weathering comes from wood surface being wet for too long, it's fungi that makes wood look gray/"blue". So yes, it comes from rain. UV don't make wood gray, it makes it darker but not gray. Nice video!
11:40, The sun puts a tan on your wood, cherry wood picks up a nice deep red color, it's the rain and elements that cause it to get that grey weathered look.
Designer firewood - have a friend in Australia sells firewood. Some people in the Sydney market complain if there's bark or sawdust sticking to the wood. Well, he brushes it clean for them and charges 30% extra.
The setup is amazing and the equipment makes a huge difference. Nice to be out of the weather and out of any mud. The organized stacked look is always beautiful but the time it takes to stack all of it is a pain. We have an outdoor boiler and I use a lot of the cutoff pieces from logs or the nasty crotch pieces for it. Zero gas or propane on the property.
Your comment about owbs it true. But what also is true most owb installers are heating more than one bldg and domestic hot water. Hard to get that from a stand alone. I heat 3300sqft (2 structures) and 2 water heaters.
@ correct. A person could just heat a chicken coop if they wanted. My point being is, many folks who decided to go with wood boilers looked at the additional savings by heating more than one dwelling. Suddenly the garages became insulated and heated with air/water heat exchangers. Pole sheds got insulated and heated. When folks just go with a stand alone radiant fireplace, stove, hearth, etc. they are limited to only heating that space. With owbs, folks could tie into existing central heating system, domestic hot water, and supply addition heat now to a previously unheated garage or pole shed. With Adam he has a stand alone fireplace which he likes and it uses minimal wood compared to owbs. But for some the trade off for more wood burned is they like heating primary and secondary dwelling and domestic hot water. The appliance is usually big enough to accomplish this.
Firewood turns gray primarily due to exposure to sunlight, specifically the ultraviolet (UV) rays, which break down the lignin in the wood, causing a natural weathering process that results in a silver-grey color change; this is often considered a sign of well-seasoned firewood as the graying indicates a loss of moisture content from prolonged exposure to the elements.
Hey Adam, that’s some setup for processing firewood now, enjoy pal 👌 I live in a different climate to yours and most of my firewood gets some sunlight exposure during the summer for only maybe max 5 hrs a day (because of where it’s stored and because Ireland doesn’t always get that much sunny weather) I’ve never had my wood discolour, nor have I noticed the front row of firewood a different shade of colour to the row behind it in the shade. From my experience it’s rain that discolours wood, in fact in Ireland if wood isn’t sheltered from the rain it’s difficult to dry properly (again in my experience). Keep the firewood videos coming, it’s your channel and it’s up to you what content you make, but it’s what I enjoy the most.
Yes, take what you and Matt are doing any time over traditionally stacking fire wood. If I were to build a property and I was going to do fire wood, then I would do so, but I grew up worrying about the barn burning down due to a chimney catching on fire for a heated horse barn, and I got sick of the barn filling up with smoke as I tried to get a fire going, But if I were to do fire wood once again I would do what you and matt are doing. I would design a barn to have 2x2 IBC pallets, as in 2 side by side with 2 addional ones stacked on top of each other, and I would design the barn to wrap those containers around the barn in a "U" shaped formation. I don't like fire wood but If I was going to do it, then I wouldn't halfass retrofit a barn, I would design the barn to avoid reliving childhood greif, and I would so so designing the barn from the ground up for iBC storage, and a roof design in which I can safely get onto of the barn to stand on top of the roof to clean the chimney and replace it once every few winters.
I think sun is it. It’s great for heat help get the moisture out but will fade paint plastic wood and ruin anything you leave out!!! I would buy the UV privacy screen wind will still go thru it and help keep your wood looking fresh cut. I use it on job sites to obscure the view of my projects Looks like I’m buying few roll and try it myself on the IBC totes Enjoy your channel RC
The older outdoor boilers use more wood than the new epa boilers, but the old ones can take anything you can fit through the door so time spent splitting is much less. The EPA boilers need a little smaller wood that is well seasoned, but use much less. As for the seasoning of your wood... Its the sun that darkens the wood because when I unload a seasoned tote of wood the outside ends of the pieces are much darker than the ends facing the center of the tote. So for my roadside stand I tend to flip the pieces when refilling it so the lighter side is out. The pieces still have all the cracks from drying out so for those who know what they're looking at they will know it's dry. Personally I think you're going to get tired of having the totes hog up your building space, at least I know I would.
Awesome setup you have. I think the look of the wood is irrelevant. I think anyone who burns wood should know that weathered wood is more likely to be seasoned. However I think you could advertize the moisture level which is the real key. Your drying wood in winter and leaving it under the covered area gets you a head start, but if you moved those totes into full sun and wind at end of spring you might have flully seasoned wood in 1/2 a year. I cut 16" oak rounds in spring this year and split May 1 and stacked it single wide on racks I built. It was 28% moisture. Resplitting pieces on July 1 I found it to be 12-13%, ready to burn. Come end of November it was 6-8%. So in 6 months I had seasoned wood ready to burn. One factor is that we have very hot summers with little rain from June through September.
Wetting and drying causes grey, along with sun. So getting wet then drying greys the wood, and sunshine makes it quicker in my experience. Since your wood will stay "dry" it will gray much slower and even, but it will change.
I burn a out 6 cord my outdoor wood boiler, but I have a newer gasification boiler (heatmaster G4000) For you, since you run a firewood business and have sawmill off cuts something like C series from heatmaster would likely be perfect you and you'd be able to heat your house and water with all the scrap you make while processing wood.
Adam, so enjoy watching you manifest and refine your processes. A thought regarding unused solar power... could you use it to drive fans to do focused blow on the wood stacks to assist drying?
Hi Adam. At 4:35, as the wedge was descending, your thumb was a few inches below it. Please be careful and aware of where your hands are, relative to the wedge, at all times.
Hey Adam love your channel. Was just thinking with your new building have you considered running some large storage batteries to bank the power coming off your pond pump solar panels? It's pretty close to your building and then you'd likely never need to haul one of your portable batteries down there to power up that space. I am sure Kyle would love to come over to help with that too
Looks to me like there is enough space under your roof to stack three of the SHORT IBC totes. Do you have any more of the short IBC totes? As for the grey oxidation of the wood: How about preforming an experiment on one of the IBC totes full of seasoned wood by using a pressure washer on the cut ends of the wood? Will the oxidation be cleaned off just like it is on a wood deck when pressure washed? Just a thought maybe worth a try just on one stack of wood. Great video thumbs up.
Don’t wheel that trailer by hand. Your back will feel it even though it’s not heavy. I bought a shunt thing that has two wheels and a handle with a ball hitch on it from Princess Auto here in 🇨🇦. Same as your tractor supply or other. They are perfect to move small trailers or wood splitters around.
Wet and muddy is good for the barn and good for the ponds! With your new stacking/drying process are you going to change your delivery process to match?
Cover all but one with a tarp test it yourself. The sun only is the answer. Every year my morning glory vines grow over my fence. The whole fence get the same moisture content but only the Sun exposure parts are stained gray. I have to power was it every fall. I also live in philly witch used to be a swamp super high moisture content all the time.
woodchips are cheap and will give you better traction and you will lose less of them into the clay during muddy periods. might not look as nice but they dont break down that much faster than you can lose gravel into wet clay when driving heavy stuff over it since it seems like a flat and low spot. if you can rent/borrow a chipper you can avoid the hauling which must be the priciest part anyways. then in a couple of years or more you can add stone on top
Ultraviolet rays from the sun break down lignin, a component of wood that gives it its natural colour. As the lignin degrades, the wood gradually loses its original hue, taking on a silver-grey patina. Moisture from rain accelerates this process by washing away the degraded lignin, exposing the underlying cellulose fibres. This photochemical degradation is a natural transformation loved by some for its gracefully aged appearance, though not appreciated by everyone. Some low sun will make wood naturally weather but the combination of UV rays AND water just makes it weather so much faster. BTW So enjoying your videos, keep them coming!
Hey Adam, Always enjoy the nice guitar music along with your content. Are you the guitarist as well? I think removing any IBC tote side panel plastic or metal will also help optimize airflow. I wonder if Solar powered electric fans could also improve drying of the wood?
Good morning Adam , I support your channel , however its like seeing a rerun of cutting wood. and I skip it. Also do have any fire protection at the shed ?.
if a customer has questions on the color, take a dark piece and cut a little cookie off it and reveal the lighter wood inside. This will solidify the idea that its good wood and that colors can be deceiving. The way we did it, I cut next years wood this year. The way many do it it is let it cure for two years. 1 yr green holds fire better, 2 yrs it doesn't and preferred for starting the fire.
IMHO the sun causes the discolor and the rain causes the rot. There is something strangely good about working up firewood while it's snowing. Nice vid Adam. Great editing as usual.
Chris from the woodyard literally proved that stacking does absolutely nothing with the vary rare customers willing to pay extra neat orderly bunks of preselect wood. Wood dried in bins is the absolute best outside in open air unstacked. Moisture content in 30 days some wood even less. Even the clean up makes since. Not too mention the earth's ebnflo.
the area that you tear up greatly conceder gravel ; though the area near the shed roof you nay want to scratch your head ... then you may just gravel on the path to your cart
11:35. UV exposure from the Sun. "Firewood turns grey primarily due to exposure to sunlight, specifically ultraviolet (UV) rays, which break down the lignin in the wood, causing it to lose its natural color and develop a silvery-grey patina; this process is accelerated by rain which washes away the degraded lignin, exposing the underlying cellulose fibers."
As a customer I prefer gray wood. It indicates to me that it’s been weathered and seasoned. It seems excessive to worry about trying to prevent the wood from changing color. You aren’t making furniture. I want dry, high quality wood, high btu content wood. That’s what you need to promote.
I have to agree I operate a small firewood business on eastern Long Island and a customer buying wood for heating purposes is not overly concerned with the color or the perfect uniformity of the splits. They want a few things in short order…..oak, maple, cherry, a little locust and ideally speaking a moisture level consistently under 20 percent. Adams organization level is second to none but is “the juice worth the squeeze” so to speak.?
@ where do you get your hardwood from? I grew up in Sayville, and live upstate now. My sister lives on the East End. Lots of scrub pine there. Not a lot of hardwood. From what I know. Or do you import the wood from other places?
I'm no tree hugger, but it seems that you could have a single electric generator inside the building and run everything on electricity with much less noise.
@@HometownAcres three phase shouldnt be that big of an issue, you can get phase converters relatively cheap. ask machinists or woodworkers, those things are common in that world because a lot of the equipment is also three-phase. instead of paying like $10-15k for an upgrade from the utility you can spend a few hundred dollars on a rotary phase converter or a VFD. Simple enough to wire and install that you don't have to hire an electrician. of course, you'd need grid power close-by. Batteries for the solar or running electricity to shed might be the most expensive part
I have to agree Adam, the building with the open area is a great idea ! Keep up the good content as your channel grows ! Mud season is upon us , from Ohio here .
Hey Adam, looks good. I sell only premium firewood in an area that pays 3-4x more than most areas. I’m very lucky. Have found that water hitting the wood is what causes the greying. Undercover will not grey much at all.
Lived in Maine for 20 years. Although I didn't have an outdoor wood boiler I've seen many being used. The operators use 4 ft to 6 ft logs and do not split them.
I sold firewood in high school back in the late 70's and I delivered 6 foot green oak logs to an engineer who designed his own wood boiler. It had a chain feed to the boiler so he didn't have to lift any wood. It fed the log to a cylinder where gas jets started the log on fire. When the log caught on fire a thermostat kicked the propane gas jets off. He said one log would last two days. I didn't have a lot of cutting involved in 6 foot logs, but those sumbeeches were heavy to load and unload.
Looks great! The only thing I am curious about is that having the wood against the wall does it cut back on the wind that would flow through the cubes. Maybe move the totes 6 “ the wall.
GOOOOOOD MORNING EVERYONE from CT at the moment…flying home to VaBch this morning…Adam, looking good! Glad it’s working out for you. Thanks for sharing HAPPY THANKSGIVING 🦃🍽 Have a day 😊
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Hey Adam, thanks for the recent video with Matt from The Firewood Guy of PA. Last week we drove 4 hours one way to pick up some kiln-dried firewood for our wood-burning stove. We had a great conversation with Matt and met some of his workers and extended family. Great business and great people. Thanks again for featuring his firewood business.
Adam, here is an idea I use put 36 in or wide mining belt down. On the ends, use 1/2 in wood paddle bit and drive 2 stakes with welded washes to hold. It's so easy to clean...
Adam, future video idea: an update on how the woods are doing after logging and an inventory of the logs you have left?
Advertising the moisture level is a great idea. You will educate your clients; it is quantifiable; and you might find (as I did) that leaving wood in the sun and wind (with just the top covered in the winter) seasons wood better than if it is away from warmth and wind. This is what works in Maine, anyway.
Good morning Adam: Your setup and workflow under the roof appear neat and efficient. As your wood processing increases and becomes routine, I suggest installing bollards at the outside corners for protection of the tin siding, and marking the wood posts with high visible color markers for safety.
Weathering comes from wood surface being wet for too long, it's fungi that makes wood look gray/"blue". So yes, it comes from rain. UV don't make wood gray, it makes it darker but not gray. Nice video!
11:40, The sun puts a tan on your wood, cherry wood picks up a nice deep red color, it's the rain and elements that cause it to get that grey weathered look.
Designer firewood - have a friend in Australia sells firewood. Some people in the Sydney market complain if there's bark or sawdust sticking to the wood. Well, he brushes it clean for them and charges 30% extra.
I would use those scraps. Keep them for the wood burner in your garage. You may have to feed it more often but, free heat.
Great video Adam. Early on my firewood journey but great to see your set up and systems. Fantastic!
We use a giant snow bucket on our tractor straight out of the conveyor. Height adjustable for east of staking.
The setup is amazing and the equipment makes a huge difference. Nice to be out of the weather and out of any mud. The organized stacked look is always beautiful but the time it takes to stack all of it is a pain.
We have an outdoor boiler and I use a lot of the cutoff pieces from logs or the nasty crotch pieces for it. Zero gas or propane on the property.
I love how firewood looks when seasoned under a roof! Can’t be beat!!👍👍
My opinion only, I do not think you can season oak firewood under a roof with no sunlight in 2 years.
@ yes you can I do it every year.
@@outdoorsinthe608 OK. I still think you need the sun beating down stacked fire wood with air flow. I like your channel.
Your comment about owbs it true. But what also is true most owb installers are heating more than one bldg and domestic hot water. Hard to get that from a stand alone. I heat 3300sqft (2 structures) and 2 water heaters.
You can do single buildings. I have a heatmaster G4000 and just do my house and hot water
@ correct. A person could just heat a chicken coop if they wanted. My point being is, many folks who decided to go with wood boilers looked at the additional savings by heating more than one dwelling. Suddenly the garages became insulated and heated with air/water heat exchangers. Pole sheds got insulated and heated. When folks just go with a stand alone radiant fireplace, stove, hearth, etc. they are limited to only heating that space. With owbs, folks could tie into existing central heating system, domestic hot water, and supply addition heat now to a previously unheated garage or pole shed. With Adam he has a stand alone fireplace which he likes and it uses minimal wood compared to owbs. But for some the trade off for more wood burned is they like heating primary and secondary dwelling and domestic hot water. The appliance is usually big enough to accomplish this.
Can't wait to actually see how it looks next year.
Firewood turns gray primarily due to exposure to sunlight, specifically the ultraviolet (UV) rays, which break down the lignin in the wood, causing a natural weathering process that results in a silver-grey color change; this is often considered a sign of well-seasoned firewood as the graying indicates a loss of moisture content from prolonged exposure to the elements.
Hey Adam, that’s some setup for processing firewood now, enjoy pal 👌
I live in a different climate to yours and most of my firewood gets some sunlight exposure during the summer for only maybe max 5 hrs a day (because of where it’s stored and because Ireland doesn’t always get that much sunny weather) I’ve never had my wood discolour, nor have I noticed the front row of firewood a different shade of colour to the row behind it in the shade. From my experience it’s rain that discolours wood, in fact in Ireland if wood isn’t sheltered from the rain it’s difficult to dry properly (again in my experience). Keep the firewood videos coming, it’s your channel and it’s up to you what content you make, but it’s what I enjoy the most.
Thanks for the feedback
Yes, take what you and Matt are doing any time over traditionally stacking fire wood. If I were to build a property and I was going to do fire wood, then I would do so, but I grew up worrying about the barn burning down due to a chimney catching on fire for a heated horse barn, and I got sick of the barn filling up with smoke as I tried to get a fire going,
But if I were to do fire wood once again I would do what you and matt are doing. I would design a barn to have 2x2 IBC pallets, as in 2 side by side with 2 addional ones stacked on top of each other, and I would design the barn to wrap those containers around the barn in a "U" shaped formation.
I don't like fire wood but If I was going to do it, then I wouldn't halfass retrofit a barn, I would design the barn to avoid reliving childhood greif, and I would so so designing the barn from the ground up for iBC storage, and a roof design in which I can safely get onto of the barn to stand on top of the roof to clean the chimney and replace it once every few winters.
Looking good
I like that building !
Greetings from Finland! Nice to see JAPA there
I think sun is it. It’s great for heat help get the moisture out but will fade paint plastic wood and ruin anything you leave out!!!
I would buy the UV privacy screen wind will still go thru it and help keep your wood looking fresh cut. I use it on job sites to obscure the view of my projects
Looks like I’m buying few roll and try it myself on the IBC totes
Enjoy your channel
RC
Little elves come at night and paint the logs gray.
Only way to prevent it is installing shag carpet under all the equipment.
What about some used shipping containers. They have some with doors at both ends. Add multiple lean-tos to your building. Hope this helps you.
The older outdoor boilers use more wood than the new epa boilers, but the old ones can take anything you can fit through the door so time spent splitting is much less. The EPA boilers need a little smaller wood that is well seasoned, but use much less. As for the seasoning of your wood... Its the sun that darkens the wood because when I unload a seasoned tote of wood the outside ends of the pieces are much darker than the ends facing the center of the tote. So for my roadside stand I tend to flip the pieces when refilling it so the lighter side is out. The pieces still have all the cracks from drying out so for those who know what they're looking at they will know it's dry. Personally I think you're going to get tired of having the totes hog up your building space, at least I know I would.
Awesome setup you have. I think the look of the wood is irrelevant. I think anyone who burns wood should know that weathered wood is more likely to be seasoned. However I think you could advertize the moisture level which is the real key. Your drying wood in winter and leaving it under the covered area gets you a head start, but if you moved those totes into full sun and wind at end of spring you might have flully seasoned wood in 1/2 a year. I cut 16" oak rounds in spring this year and split May 1 and stacked it single wide on racks I built. It was 28% moisture. Resplitting pieces on July 1 I found it to be 12-13%, ready to burn. Come end of November it was 6-8%. So in 6 months I had seasoned wood ready to burn. One factor is that we have very hot summers with little rain from June through September.
Wetting and drying causes grey, along with sun. So getting wet then drying greys the wood, and sunshine makes it quicker in my experience.
Since your wood will stay "dry" it will gray much slower and even, but it will change.
Oh! your aching back! Take care of your back or you won't be in a happy place anytime soon. You are a tall guy and that multiplies the stress.
Hey Adam, just a thought, maybe you could make the sides of you trailer a little higher, just have them removable.
My question is when you break ground on the dedicated wood drying shelter as the totes fill up that space so quickly.
At least it looks like it will freeze well next week, so that will help with the mud!
Yep
I burn a out 6 cord my outdoor wood boiler, but I have a newer gasification boiler (heatmaster G4000)
For you, since you run a firewood business and have sawmill off cuts something like C series from heatmaster would likely be perfect you and you'd be able to heat your house and water with all the scrap you make while processing wood.
The firewood looks great. You're overthinking the graying of the wood.
For the small stuff you should research the pizza oven, solo, etc... market
Adam, so enjoy watching you manifest and refine your processes. A thought regarding unused solar power... could you use it to drive fans to do focused blow on the wood stacks to assist drying?
Hi Adam. At 4:35, as the wedge was descending, your thumb was a few inches below it. Please be careful and aware of where your hands are, relative to the wedge, at all times.
Turn the IBCs 90 degrees. Minimal weather exposure on the cut edge 😇
That’s actually a really good idea
Hey Adam love your channel. Was just thinking with your new building have you considered running some large storage batteries to bank the power coming off your pond pump solar panels? It's pretty close to your building and then you'd likely never need to haul one of your portable batteries down there to power up that space. I am sure Kyle would love to come over to help with that too
I would say to put some side boards on the small trailer to give about a basket full of wood to stack??? I enjoy your videos, keep up the good work!!
Thanks for the tip!
Good morning Adam!
Morning!
Looks to me like there is enough space under your roof to stack three of the SHORT IBC totes. Do you have any more of the short IBC totes? As for the grey oxidation of the wood: How about preforming an experiment on one of the IBC totes full of seasoned wood by using a pressure washer on the cut ends of the wood? Will the oxidation be cleaned off just like it is on a wood deck when pressure washed? Just a thought maybe worth a try just on one stack of wood. Great video thumbs up.
I think Neighbor Doug is painting the ends gray.
outdoor wood boiler don't want logs split and cut 16". You want longer, larger pieces to burn long and slow.
The wood out in the open will dry quicker, I think.
This wood with the solid wall on the back side may be slow to season.
Hello from Joe The Grower in NY The East Coast King of Firewood 🔥 🪵 over 5000 plus cords in stock and growing. A must see Farm.
Have that great neighbor Doug help u build light sides for the cart so u can pit an ibc tote in it . Just my 4 cents
If weather got bad could even tarp it off to work although would hinder icb tote moving
Gonna be 72 here in Southern Oklahoma today.
Under mine, i have gravel, and all i do is blow off the shavings, and it's perfect.
you can always drape to keep sun off wood
Don’t wheel that trailer by hand. Your back will feel it even though it’s not heavy. I bought a shunt thing that has two wheels and a handle with a ball hitch on it from Princess Auto here in 🇨🇦. Same as your tractor supply or other. They are perfect to move small trailers or wood splitters around.
Wet and muddy is good for the barn and good for the ponds!
With your new stacking/drying process are you going to change your delivery process to match?
Possibly. Right now I load IBC totes into the bed of the pickup truck and hand toss them out at the customers unless they have a tractor to unload
Cover all but one with a tarp test it yourself. The sun only is the answer. Every year my morning glory vines grow over my fence. The whole fence get the same moisture content but only the Sun exposure parts are stained gray. I have to power was it every fall. I also live in philly witch used to be a swamp super high moisture content all the time.
Make sure to get large gravel so it doesn't get pushed in and disappear
Could you package the little pieces left in the cart as kindling and sell it at your roadside stand
I do. I bundle them
woodchips are cheap and will give you better traction and you will lose less of them into the clay during muddy periods. might not look as nice but they dont break down that much faster than you can lose gravel into wet clay when driving heavy stuff over it since it seems like a flat and low spot. if you can rent/borrow a chipper you can avoid the hauling which must be the priciest part anyways. then in a couple of years or more you can add stone on top
Ultraviolet rays from the sun break down lignin, a component of wood that gives it its natural colour. As the lignin degrades, the wood gradually loses its original hue, taking on a silver-grey patina. Moisture from rain accelerates this process by washing away the degraded lignin, exposing the underlying cellulose fibres. This photochemical degradation is a natural transformation loved by some for its gracefully aged appearance, though not appreciated by everyone. Some low sun will make wood naturally weather but the combination of UV rays AND water just makes it weather so much faster. BTW So enjoying your videos, keep them coming!
Hey Adam, Always enjoy the nice guitar music along with your content. Are you the guitarist as well? I think removing any IBC tote side panel plastic or metal will also help optimize airflow. I wonder if Solar powered electric fans could also improve drying of the wood?
Good morning Adam , I support your channel , however its like seeing a rerun of cutting wood. and I skip it. Also do have any fire protection at the shed ?.
if a customer has questions on the color, take a dark piece and cut a little cookie off it and reveal the lighter wood inside. This will solidify the idea that its good wood and that colors can be deceiving. The way we did it, I cut next years wood this year. The way many do it it is let it cure for two years. 1 yr green holds fire better, 2 yrs it doesn't and preferred for starting the fire.
I would like to know what is the average price for a crate of firewood?
I guess you need to invest for drying container to process seasoning in week and deliver fresh looking wood for customers immediatelly after its ready
Did you ever mentioned how much it cost you to put up that awesome new building?
IMHO the sun causes the discolor and the rain causes the rot.
There is something strangely good about working up firewood while it's snowing.
Nice vid Adam. Great editing as usual.
Just an observation on your small leftover pieces… why couldn’t you stack them up on top of each other and split them all at once?
If my Douglas fir hasnt turned a bit gray i dont even check to see if its dry. But i am one of those oddballs thats like having 4 years ahead😅
Chris from the woodyard literally proved that stacking does absolutely nothing with the vary rare customers willing to pay extra neat orderly bunks of preselect wood. Wood dried in bins is the absolute best outside in open air unstacked. Moisture content in 30 days some wood even less. Even the clean up makes since. Not too mention the earth's ebnflo.
I think your wood is going to turn gray no matter what as it dries.
The grey is mostly from the water hitting it
@@willdavidsonakawd3062and a little bit of uv bleaching the tannins but water if definitely mostly to blame.
👍
the area that you tear up greatly conceder gravel ; though the area near the shed roof you nay want to scratch your head ... then you may just gravel on the path to your cart
The sun does all the damage to everything.
Love your machines and your storage shed. Great job.
move your implements to the lean-too
The volume that you sell it probably isn’t effective to store under roof and season efficiently. It’s only the ends and top layer that greys.
11:35. UV exposure from the Sun.
"Firewood turns grey primarily due to exposure to sunlight, specifically ultraviolet (UV) rays, which break down the lignin in the wood, causing it to lose its natural color and develop a silvery-grey patina; this process is accelerated by rain which washes away the degraded lignin, exposing the underlying cellulose fibers."
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing
As a customer I prefer gray wood. It indicates to me that it’s been weathered and seasoned. It seems excessive to worry about trying to prevent the wood from changing color. You aren’t making furniture. I want dry, high quality wood, high btu content wood. That’s what you need to promote.
I have to agree I operate a small firewood business on eastern Long Island and a customer buying wood for heating purposes is not overly concerned with the color or the perfect uniformity of the splits. They want a few things in short order…..oak, maple, cherry, a little locust and ideally speaking a moisture level consistently under 20 percent. Adams organization level is second to none but is “the juice worth the squeeze” so to speak.?
@ where do you get your hardwood from? I grew up in Sayville, and live upstate now. My sister lives on the East End. Lots of scrub pine there. Not a lot of hardwood. From what I know. Or do you import the wood from other places?
I would pipe all the downspouts underground and out of the way before you put gravel in to stay out of the mud.
I'm no tree hugger, but it seems that you could have a single electric generator inside the building and run everything on electricity with much less noise.
Most of this equipment would require 3 phase I think. Not economical at all to install. It probably would be in the long run though
@@HometownAcres Put it on the 5 to 10 year list of projects😀.
@@HometownAcres three phase shouldnt be that big of an issue, you can get phase converters relatively cheap. ask machinists or woodworkers, those things are common in that world because a lot of the equipment is also three-phase. instead of paying like $10-15k for an upgrade from the utility you can spend a few hundred dollars on a rotary phase converter or a VFD. Simple enough to wire and install that you don't have to hire an electrician. of course, you'd need grid power close-by. Batteries for the solar or running electricity to shed might be the most expensive part
3 cages equal a full cord??
Yes
looks good great job
Joe from OWB would be proud! Looks great.
Joe is jealous 😆
Forget the sun, the rain is what really causes excess greying.
That looks a perfect place for storage. Crack on Adam. 👌
Why not sell your off cuts at the firewood stand Charge an amount for a basket full
What’s going on with the pond these days?
Just letting them fill
Crushed stone, not gravel
You need to pour concrete around and in the shed.
One day when budget allows but it’s pretty low on the priority list right now
Nice looking stacks!!!
How is your pace of getting through the logs before they start to rot?
Holy geez!! What a setup!! Sweet!!!
NIce set up you got there..
I have to agree Adam, the building with the open area is a great idea ! Keep up the good content as your channel grows ! Mud season is upon us , from Ohio here .
Can you get road millings?
You’d think they’d be inexpensive since they are a recycled product but they are surprisingly expensive around us
Bro just turn your crates 90⁰ so the faces of wood wont get the sun
That does look nice 👍
Hey Adam, looks good. I sell only premium firewood in an area that pays 3-4x more than most areas. I’m very lucky. Have found that water hitting the wood is what causes the greying. Undercover will not grey much at all.
Lived in Maine for 20 years. Although I didn't have an outdoor wood boiler I've seen many being used. The operators use 4 ft to 6 ft logs and do not split them.
I sold firewood in high school back in the late 70's and I delivered 6 foot green oak logs to an engineer who designed his own wood boiler. It had a chain feed to the boiler so he didn't have to lift any wood. It fed the log to a cylinder where gas jets started the log on fire. When the log caught on fire a thermostat kicked the propane gas jets off. He said one log would last two days. I didn't have a lot of cutting involved in 6 foot logs, but those sumbeeches were heavy to load and unload.
Been one hell of a productive year on the homestead. Thanks for all the content. Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family.
Same to you!
Looks great! The only thing I am curious about is that having the wood against the wall does it cut back on the wind that would flow through the cubes. Maybe move the totes 6 “ the wall.
I have the totes 12” away from the wall so I don’t have to worry about running my forks into my nice new sheet metal
GOOOOOOD
MORNING EVERYONE from CT at the moment…flying home to VaBch this morning…Adam, looking good! Glad it’s working out for you.
Thanks for sharing
HAPPY THANKSGIVING 🦃🍽
Have a day 😊
Happy Thanksgiving