Scrounging Firewood (and other stuff)

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I am thinking I will go and scrounge a really neat old yard/garden bench that some neighbors of mine tossed out to the street. has a bit of Nordic styling to it. and heavy duty. top is dry rotted on sides of top boards... junk, imo. but having scoped it out today, seems the repairs needed are easy to do. just have to do them. table saw, skil, drill, hammer, nails and some glue. then if it fits, thinking to put it back in the far end of the woodshed. not sure I will refill it with firewood. in any event, I will find a good place for it. maybe an outside workbench back of my barn area. doubt it will be gone, no one took it today. I almost went to get it today, but... other things took precedent. i'll post a pix if I haul it in...
 
Got the call today "I got a load of wood for you"! Probably 5 pickup loads, I got two today. Unfortunately it's wet and muddy where my wood pile is, so I had to unload up by the house. Looking forward to trying out that new splitter!
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Look like nice dead ash Jeff.:rock2:
 
You guys must have real dry climates. I can assure you there is no 20+ year old firewood around here, with the possible exception of Locust and maybe some Rock Oak (Chestnut Oak).

I fact, a lot of wood will go punky after 2-3 years.

I'm in a semi arid climate here, about 16" total precip/yr. I have had willow in the stacks directly on the ground for over 4 or 5 years with no deterioration even in the layer on the ground. I have cut and burned bucksking willow from logs that have been down for years - only minor surface rot where in contact with the ground.
 
Beautiful pic, looks like a great day.

I'm heading out on Saturday morning to look at a pile of (what I have been told is) black locust that one of my farmer clients has stacked up ready to torch when the fire season closes 1st May. He said I could take what I wanted since "he's not burning that $hit". Seems many/most Australians will only burn eucalypt and turn their noses up at any other hardwood, and I'll admit that I was a bit the same prior to joining AS. Whether Aussie grown black locust is as good/better/worse than US grown locust I don't know but in the spirit of scientific inquiry I am going to find out. If it is as good as US locust then it would be comparable to the typical firewood species in my area so I'll be more than happy to take it when I can drive right up next to a pile and start cutting.

Don't forget to take some pics of it and the bark too, will be interesting to see what it looks like.
 
Well, Big Sky day here today :)

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So I headed out to the pit to get a small load of spruce for the week .
I wanted some smaller stuff for shorter burn times as the temps warm up on the sunny days .
Some of the spruce put up a fight lol

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Good you got it today Dan. We're sending you some chitty weather tomorrow. :nofunny:
 
image.jpg Im stuck burning apple tonight. Snows headed out so till i get a darn helicopter i cant ger to any spruce or tamarack. Might check the ice in the morning and go on a run. Shoulda left the snowmobile back in the hardwoods, and just used the atv for the first part of the tour.
 
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