I cut on my own land, so I don't have to move it too great a distance, and I hand split and/or noodle big stuff and knots. In recent years I have gone to bucking, final splitting and temporary stacking right in place. I just find a couple of long sticks and use a small tree as an end stop. The reason for this is that I find the best of plans have a way of getting diverted, and this way come the next winter there is a stack of wood that has been drying for months rather than a pile of rounds I never got around to finish moving or processing. I still need to move it, but it is burnable. Basically, I try to get stuff seasoning ASAP.
In late fall I go around and collect the stacks. I end up with stacks all over the woods, but I've come to like that.
If I need to move them out of the location they are in I quarter them or whatever to get something I can move without hurting my back, but don't final split so as to avoid having to make more trips walking them out. But protecting the back is key - I hurt that and I can't do the work I need to do to live here. Those go down to my splitting pile across the lane.