Don't burn pine , pine burning thread .

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My land has a mess of standing dead white pine, some of it sizeable. I dropped one, cut a few rounds and split it out to 19% on the MM. It also has a good stand of living pine too. I haven't brought myself to process too much of it since I was working on building stacks of hardwood. I know its a good wood, but I just need to find the time to start getting it cut and split out. I figure worse comes to worse, I can sell it on craigslist by the truckload as camp wood. Right now I have been working on every dead Ash, these sticks of what I think is hard maple that is also dead and de-barked, and fallen Red oak that is dead and dry.

Enough of my ramble, I had a thought and wandered off it quick without remembering the actual point I was going to make.... :crazy::baaa:
 
I burn loads of Eastern White Pine, gotta clean up them slabs somehow, so I convert then to btus for off season burning and on the chip burner for off season water heating.

I recently torn down a 100+ year old barn made of cedar, been burning that for the past few weeks, funny to get a 4 hr burn out of a piece of cedar!

Amen to that! I removed 4 of them I had planted some 30 years ago (growing up into power line), had some good sized trunks. Figured it would burn about like gasoline. Nope, burned like a good hardwood.

Harry K
 
LOL
Regional "slang" names make for confusion...

What turnkey is talkin' 'bout and calling "real Tamarack/Larch" is the Western Larch (Larix occidentalis)... it is a "real" Larch, it ain't the "real" Tamarack (but it may be nicknamed that locally). The word Tamarack is an Algonquian Indian word meaning "snowshoe wood", or something close to that... and there weren't no Algonquian Indians in the western United States so it's near impossible to claim the "real" Tamarack grows there when considering the word's origin.

What dancan is talkin' 'bout, and benp is callin' Swamp Pine, is the Eastern Larch (Larix laricina)... it is the "real" Tamarack and grows mostly in swampy areas. It is fairly wide-spread in Canada, but the only place you'll find the "real" Tamarack (Eastern Larch) growing in the United States is in the Great Lakes region and far northeast... Northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, New York and on up into Maine.

Now the "real" Swamp Pine (Pinus elliottii), also called the Slash Pine, grows in the far southeast United States... like Florida far southeast.

Hey... just straitening out the confusion... b'cause I can :D
*

Thanks for that!!
 
I barbecued with pine once, but the steak tasted like pinesol, so I spruced it up with some hickory.
I moved a small stack of pine into the garage to keep it dry ahead of the remnants of hurricane Patricia that blew through here the last couple days. Now the garage smells like somebody has cleaned it with Pinesol...or dropped off a load of Pine lumber...I like it
 
I moved a small stack of pine into the garage to keep it dry ahead of the remnants of hurricane Patricia that blew through here the last couple days. Now the garage smells like somebody has cleaned it with Pinesol...or dropped off a load of Pine lumber...I like it

I agree.

I also like that clean, although sometimes extremely strong smell that occupies the stove house after I load it with fresh cut/split tamarack.
 
I just cleaned up some dead locust that had fallen. I usually leave that for my emergency standing dry wood if I run out late season, but when they fall I cut them.

Anyhow back to burning, I brought in about 4 wheel barrow loads of thumb sized locust sticks that I'm burning as I type. I cut them with the electric saw as I feed them in the stove.
 
Sometimes I mix green pine with something like seasoned maple or something. Works good.
 
My shoulder season wood is black cherry and elm. Yes. I am spoiled and I will readily admit it.
 
My shoulder season wood is black cherry and elm. Yes. I am spoiled and I will readily admit it.
Cherry is some dang good stuff. I've got a little bit in my pile still to burn.
 
Well, I buzzed up close to a cord of pine slab wood a couple days ago,

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and it's all headed to my basement wood burning furnace to make heat, I've never heard my stove complain even one time, because pine was going in it!

AND "I" don't have any complaints either!

SR
 
I got an request to post an updated pict. of my deer blind here, here's the latest pict of it,

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I'll do a bit more on it next spring...

SR
 
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