Cherry's good for chicken and pork too.
I like black locust too. Has a different smell, like cigar smoke and turmeric combined.My favorite is Black Locust. Burns hot (got to be careful) and long. Weathers well from year to year. Mulberry burns about the same, but the sapwood gets a little buggy (Powder Post Beetles?) and becomes dusty. Hackberry is my third favorite because it burns hot also. Gets buggy too, though. 4th (tmi?) is White Oak because of it'e weather resistance followed by Red Oak. Throw in a little Walnut to round it out.
I don't run into much Hickory and will take Oaks over Hickory because Hickory gets buggy too. Most Maples I run around here are Soft (Silver?) Maple. Cut three loads one year and tried to burn the following year, but it just sat there and sizzled. Two years later, I burn the remaining as camp wood and it does just fine. I usually have enough hardwood available that I don't have to mess with Maple.
As for BBQ, I only use Cherry. Everything else gives me heartburn.
A fellow Ontarian! You live in a beautiful area. I hope to do some tourism up the Bruce Peninsula this season. I have a 17 ft fish n ski with downriggers but have never used them anywhere yet. However, I do go to the rivers for salmon and troutI'm a huge fan of apple. Used some apple to smoke a chunk of brisket this weekend and it was delish! Scrounged up a salmon on Sunday. Great weekend!
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Cowboy I find the same thing with the diesel Territory. It uses about $5 more fuel it’s a full load on the 440km journey from my sisters house. As a result I pretty much just do all my scrounging from there now as they have 100 acres of dry woodland so guaranteed to come home with a full load of top notch hardwood.
Right on! Downrigging is a lot of fun once you get the hang of it.A fellow Ontarian! You live in a beautiful area. I hope to do some tourism up the Bruce Peninsula this season. I have a 17 ft fish n ski with downriggers but have never used them anywhere yet. However, I do go to the rivers for salmon and trout
Yes! Such a productive way to fish!!Right on! Downrigging is a lot of fun once you get the hang of it.
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When my son graduated with a Masters in Computer Science, and a BS in Physics, his first job offer was from Uber, to program driverless cars. He works programing missile defense systems instead. My BIL told me that he read that GM posted they would no longer be making IC engines after 2035.As for the future of cars, about 3 years ago I read a great article, think it was on the BBC, that postulated a swap to electric, self driving vehicles and an end to private ownership could happen in as little as a decade. The switch to cars from horse and carriage took about that. I recall it showed 2 photos of, iiirc, time Square a decade apart. First was almost all horses, second was all cars. It then explained how the advantages from electric cars, self driving and Uber all strongly compliment. The age of the personal motor car could be ending.
I got married and had kids too. One is an Occupational Therapist, and the other programs Missile Defense Systems. They both say the reason I sent them to school, is so they can BUY their firewood, and not have to MAKE it.The old lady had a couple of days in hospital last week so I thought I'd head down to see her. Might as well take a load of wood down too. The challenge was to see if the wood stacked against the shed would fit in the Ranger tub and trailer.
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I knew I got married and had kids for a reason.
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Wood loaded...
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This much left...
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no argument with that comment....I have some K2 on Brett’s suggestion and also have some Klotz (whichever one you guys recommended for saws). No complaints BUT neither of them have very much dye and it’s a bit disconcerting to pour nearly clear fuel into a high dollar saw. I’ll probably go back to the grey bottle Husky oil after I’m done with these cause it’s got plenty of blue dye. The premix fuel is a rip off unless you use less than a tank full per year. Which certainly doesn’t apply to any of us on this section of the form. Maybe the PSP boys and the builder groupies can justify using that stuff.
i had an idea and it led me to scrounge up a mobile fuel farm. handy! i hate to run out of gasoline when using my walk-behinds... wanted a high sided box and i added some slip in dividers... now all i gotta do is load up... and pour! no fuss, no mess... and no spills. thinking one fuel cell marked MXD mite work for me, too... when doing them long pasture line fences.... has a funnel kit, too for ez pour convenience.This is why I have no problem paying $4/gallon or so for 100LL for my small engines and 2-stroke mixes. I could not believe the price for the 40:1 or 50:1 premixes from lowes. I guess of you rarely run a saw they're fine, but this boy can't see paying that!!
I now mix with the Husqvarna synthetic stuff, but used Stihl orange "high performance" for many years. 100LL works awesome! My saws, weed eaters, log splitter, and generators always fire, no matter how long they've been sitting.
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