Easy firewood score

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sredlin

sredlin

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This has to be the easiest firewood score I have ever came across. Pine 4X4's, 52 inches long--these were used inside of large water pipe for support on transit---the contractor has them piled in cubes of 225 pieces--just back up and load---no splitting just cut into 3 or 4 pieces---already dry---I have picked up about 1200 so far
 
thombat4

thombat4

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This has to be the easiest firewood score I have ever came across. Pine 4X4's, 52 inches long--these were used inside of large water pipe for support on transit---the contractor has them piled in cubes of 225 pieces--just back up and load---no splitting just cut into 3 or 4 pieces---already dry---I have picked up about 1200 so far

Talk about being in the right place at the right time!! Excellent score:clap: :clap:!!
 
sredlin

sredlin

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no I use a Jotul F3 cast iron stove---I know pine isn't the best but it works for everybody out west--I will throw on some hackberry, ash or mulberry when I get the stove going good
 
fletcher0780

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no I use a Jotul F3 cast iron stove---I know pine isn't the best but it works for everybody out west--I will throw on some hackberry, ash or mulberry when I get the stove going good

I always thought you weren't supposed to burn softwood in a fireplace or stove? I guess you just need to load the stove and clean the chimney more often?
 
Husky137

Husky137

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I always thought you weren't supposed to burn softwood in a fireplace or stove? I guess you just need to load the stove and clean the chimney more often?

Some parts of the world/country don't have access or the luxury of burning all hardwood or any hardwood. Poorly seasoned or improperly burned hardwood will give you just as many chimney problems as softwood.
 
woodbooga

woodbooga

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can't hardly believe it---3 miles from home ---they do have one or two nails each in the ends but I can dodge them with the saw

Burn 'em nails and all. Keep a strong magnet handy to pull the nails from the ash before you spread on your lawn or anywhere you might walk.

I always thought you weren't supposed to burn softwood in a fireplace or stove? I guess you just need to load the stove and clean the chimney more often?

If that we're the case, there'd be a lot of mighty cold people living above the 45th parallel and elsewhere where hardwoods are pretty scarce.
 
fletcher0780

fletcher0780

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If that we're the case, there'd be a lot of mighty cold people living above the 45th parallel and elsewhere where hardwoods are pretty scarce.

good to know, we always left the softwood behind when doing firewood. I guess having an adequate supply of hardwood negates the need to mess with the other stuff. It's got to get messy handling pine with all that sticky sap.
 
urhstry

urhstry

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Too bad they weren't a little longer. You could sell them to someone to make a fence row with them. Then use the money and buy a few cords of wood. I still think there could be another use for them other than firewood, unless you really need it.:monkey: Nice score either way.
 

046

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folks in Tulsa are spoiled ... with a free municipal green dump for home owners, minimal charge for commercial.

this means a central dumping point for all tree contractors and home owners in Tulsa.

they've got a HUGE tub grinder that spews out mountains of free mulch. with front end loaders that loads mulch only for free. You gotta load your own wood.

there's always a football field+ worth of free wood for the taking. don't see what you like... wait a bit and someone will pull up with what your are looking for.

only negative is location... aprox. 15 miles out near edge of town. but it's located right off an expressway. sooo... it's not really that bad.
 
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flewism

flewism

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If I had a new source for rough sawed 4 by 4's I'd start building these again in a heartbeat. I built about 20 of these 4 years ago and they were selling as fast as I built them for $250 each, with a $200 profit. My free wood source (work) got cut off because everybody wanted to burn them, go figure??
 
roadkingjd

roadkingjd

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Looks like some nice wood there. Run those logs through a planer to clean em' up and you could probably sell it for more value then burning it.
 
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