Seasoned?

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Wood can not be measured very accurate by guessing on two similar sized wood pieces. Get a 20 gallon tub or close to it and carefully fill it with water to a fill line that is below the top. Then measure exactly a one or one and a half cubit feet of water and pour it into the tub and note the exact level of water in the tub and mark it. Grab a piece of wood and submerge it under water and when the water comes to the one cubic foot mark on the tub you have measured a one cubic foot piece of wood. Of course you will need to let it dry or weigh it before submerging. The other option is cutting a exact piece of wood square. Thanks


My point is, wood is not always consistent, even within the same tree. The ratio of wood fiber, air, moisture and pitch is not consistent in every piece of wood. Sap wood vs heartwood, not the same.
 
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When I was delivering to the coast where as humidity was often in the 80% range the owner would never allow any unsplit wood on the property. It had to be split and cut to 22''. In the space that I see could easily handle 200 plus cords. Of course it took 6 skilled workers to stack 20 cords 2 or 3 hours not counting me. Our stacks were in the range of 40 to 50 feet high. It goes with out saying that a cord of mixed sold for at least $1000 so it was worthwhile to handle. Thanks

I'd love to see a picture of those 40 to 50 foot tall stacks.
 
Here in MI the max plate sticker is 160,000. But they still have to abide by axle ratings which is why there are so many tag axles.

Our roads suck though.
Weight ratings protect roadways but it's the bridge weights that are more important. Most truckers are not gonna move there axles just to cross a bridge.
 
Weight ratings protect roadways but it's the bridge weights that are more important. Most truckers are not gonna move there axles just to cross a bridge.
Our bridges suck too.

The roads and their supporting infrastructure here really are in horrible condition.

sent from a field
 
My point is, wood is not always consistent, even within the same tree. The ratio of wood fiber, air, moisture and pitch is not consistent in every piece of wood. Sap wood vs heartwood, not the same.

I very much agree wood is never the same. I cut some Pine a few years ago and thought the wood was some what heavy. After three years it still seemed heavy so took some samples and it burned fine, but was much heavier than the rest. After some years handling wood fewer surprises come about. Thanks
I'd love to see a picture of those 40 to 50 foot tall stacks.
 
I'd love to see a picture of those 40 to 50 foot tall stacks.

I have not delivered to Newport Beach in several years and I am sure the owner has since passed away, but I have a new camera so maybe I could click a few. I know a guy in a close by community that stacks pretty high too. For me I go 20' high, but now and then a stack falls over. It is no fun to restack a pile that you spent all day putting up. Thanks
 
"SEASONED", this word can be interpreted in many ways to time and flavor ! seasoned, as in as little as 3 month's or as lightly salted and peppered to taste.. ??? now for a better choice of a word "AGED" wood, settle in as a better statement for "QUALITY"...…..
 
"SEASONED", this word can be interpreted in many ways to time and flavor ! seasoned, as in as little as 3 month's or as lightly salted and peppered to taste.. ??? now for a better choice of a word "AGED" wood, settle in as a better statement for "QUALITY"...…..
How are you defining "AGED"
 
"SEASONED", this word can be interpreted in many ways to time and flavor ! seasoned, as in as little as 3 month's or as lightly salted and peppered to taste.. ??? now for a better choice of a word "AGED" wood, settle in as a better statement for "QUALITY"...…..

I cut a Pine tree that was interfering with a power line 3 weeks ago. It had pitch dripping around the edge. The customer did not like the hack job that the power company did so he asked if I had time, because he wanted it gone. It is now aged seasoned and ready to burn because I burnt some yesterday. There is no difference to some I cut last spring. Oak will take up to 3 months to be fully ready to burn remember this is not our rainy season. We do not have issues with seasoned aged or dry wood here, no we have fires that devourers hundreds of square miles of landscape if left unattended. Thanks
 
Sold some year old Oak firewood today to a guy who bought a rather nice smoker from Oklahoma. I guess he used to live down that way for a number of years. Saw pictures. Work of art on wheels with a trailer hitch. Lots of stainless steel. Guess the firewood is seasoned enough.

Every buyers is different. I've had the dont cares and the must be perfect both. Throw an honest ad out there and see what bites. :)
 
I just use my personal judgement as to if the wood is properly season. I just cut and burn for myself, so I aint trying to satisfy anybody else. I try to only burn wood that has been cut and split for at least a year. I store the wood in the dry so it doesnt get rained on. My firewood may lay in log form for a year before splitting and then stacked in the shed a year before burning. I dont really stick to any one method of choosing which wood to burn. If its wood, it burns. Sometimes when I load the wagon for the stove, I might stop at the wood pile and throw on a few sticks that are laying in the way of my mower. Those sticks may or maynot be completely dry, but they are in the way so I burn them. Some wood just dries faster than other woods. I have a bunch of Bradford Pear that will be rotten if left in a plie for a year. Got some big white oak that has been laying on the ground for almost two years, Mushrooms growing on it, I bet if split it would be sopping wet inside. Got a few Maple logs a couple months ago, not big stuff, and looks to be drying in log form. certainly not dry wood, but once split should be ready to burn this winter. Anyways, I basicly burn what I have, not always what I want. If I need a fire, even green wood will do. Any wood laying on the bare soil will always be wet and wont burnworth a hoot. Stack it inside by the stove for a few days and it will burn like tinder.
 

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