Post pictures of your woodpile/splitting area

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
But... Still No pics, (at least nothing substantial). I couldn't get by here in the Mid-Atlantic w/ the wood you've showed us so far.
Most of us on here have wives, kids, jobs, etc., etc. Still-- you asked, we showed.. Pretty stacks, ugly stacks, big thrown piles, wood to die for, wood that I wouldn't want if you dropped it off already split,... We found time to make it & we found time to post it.

We're waiting for you to reciprocate..........

I learned a long time ago that those Mainers "git 'er done" by their own schedule. No amount of ribbing, brow beating
or downright flogging will change that.
 
I learned a long time ago that those Mainers "git 'er done" by their own schedule. No amount of ribbing, brow beating
or downright flogging will change that.

Ya think???
They've had 200 years and still can't populate their state!!!
Now that's slow!!!
:msp_wink:
 
Last edited:
Ya think???
They've had 200 years and still can't populate their state!!!
Now that's slow!!!
:msp_wink:

That's what makes it great. I'd like to have a couple hundred acres up there in the north west corner.
 
Ya... It's nice up there... But I got my eye toward the U.P. of MI...
Soon my friend...
Soon...
:msp_wink:

Best of luck. That's beautiful country. I live in IL, so anywhere would probably be better than here.
Well, except California (erecting flame guard). I don't mind the northern winters, having lived several
years in "lake effect" country.
 
But... Still No pics, (at least nothing substantial). I couldn't get by here in the Mid-Atlantic w/ the wood you've showed us so far.
Most of us on here have wives, kids, jobs, etc., etc. Still-- you asked, we showed.. Pretty stacks, ugly stacks, big thrown piles, wood to die for, wood that I wouldn't want if you dropped it off already split,... We found time to make it & we found time to post it.

We're waiting for you to reciprocate..........

Young Shane has not yet experienced the thrill of opening a heating bill with his name on it. I find that works wonders for wood cutting productivity.

He's probably waiting for the dealer to finish sharpening his chains and maul :D :poke:
 
Young Shane has not yet experienced the thrill of opening a heating bill with his name on it. I find that works wonders for wood cutting productivity.

He's probably waiting for the dealer to finish sharpening his chains and maul :D :poke:

Shane, it looks like you're the down-range officer today. Keep your head low.
 
Nice pictures NHLocal!

.....thanks Shane, looking forward to some of your pics.....:hmm3grin2orange:

We got our hands on some creosoted slabs from some power poles that were turned into uprights for
a pole barn. We put our skids on them, or whatever waste PT that we can get our hands on. Our skids
last a long time. Sometimes they break from the weight. Rot is usually not a problem. Our "soil" is
mud/clay during the rainy season.

.....thanks!, that's a great idea, I'll try to get a hold of some.....funny, after putting in all that time and effort to put up the woodshed using PT I never even thought of trying to keep the pallets from rotting.....:dizzy:
 
.....thanks Shane, looking forward to some of your pics.....:hmm3grin2orange:



.....thanks!, that's a great idea, I'll try to get a hold of some.....funny, after putting in all that time and effort to put up the woodshed using PT I never even thought of trying to keep the pallets from rotting.....:dizzy:

Awe hell... Just put concrete in it... It's worth it!!!
:msp_wink:
 
.....thanks Shane, looking forward to some of your pics.....:hmm3grin2orange:



.....thanks!, that's a great idea, I'll try to get a hold of some.....funny, after putting in all that time and effort to put up the woodshed using PT I never even thought of trying to keep the pallets from rotting.....:dizzy:

Just started using pallets this year, but I made sure to use old bricks/busted concrete/pressure treated scraps under them. Plus, it gets the wood a little higher up, maybe a few extra inches off the ground will improve air flow some. Make it easier to spray or string trim around them as well.
 
Just started using pallets this year, but I made sure to use old bricks/busted concrete/pressure treated scraps under them. Plus, it gets the wood a little higher up, maybe a few extra inches off the ground will improve air flow some. Make it easier to spray or string trim around them as well.

Plus it's a nice condo for your pet snakes to live under...
:big_smile:
 
Plus it's a nice condo for your pet snakes to live under...
:big_smile:

JEEZ! Don't let my wife see that. The neighbor down the street found a young copperhead sliding down the hallway of her first floor. I told her the snake was feeding off of the rodents that raid another neighbors corn and bean garden. I wouldn't want her to think snakes have anything to do with wood or she'll set fire to all six cords in my backyard screaming "Burn Witch".
 
I ain't emptying the wood shed just to pour concrete. Besides, they'd probably just raise my property
taxes again.

I had to pour my barn 1 bay at a time for exact same reason... There was always wood somewhere in it...
:msp_wink:
Can't help ya on the taxes... You'll have to move...
 
I had to pour my barn 1 bay at a time for exact same reason... There was always wood somewhere in it...
:msp_wink:
Can't help ya on the taxes... You'll have to move...

Can't do that since my woodshed is just that. 13 x 13 with one door.

Yea, the taxes are starting to suck. Property value drops 20%, property taxes go up 20%. Must be that new math.
Per a previous discussion, I am giving serious thought regarding that last statement.
 
Plus it's a nice condo for your pet snakes to live under...
:big_smile:

Actucally..we do have several quite large big king snakes I think they are live around the house/greenhouse/woodpiles/clukeraptor containment compound. I like 'em.

I saw one once back up in the mountains here that would have been a world record most likely. I almost hit it on the road. Single lane dirt road but not a jeep rut road, a bonafide road I lived on it, had mailboxes, etc, some houses every so often), that wide. The snake was on both sides of the road crossing it. I thought it was a downed tree limb and slowed down/stopped to clear it and it was moving! Biggest snake I ever saw outside of a zoo. Not as thick as a big like boa or anaconda but dang long. Saw another one similar large (not quite as big but still big, same area, at our house) climbing a tree and it had six to seven feet of body up in the tree and a few feet on the ground. Amazing climbers.
 
Actucally..we do have several quite large big king snakes I think they are live around the house/greenhouse/woodpiles/clukeraptor containment compound. I like 'em.

I wouldn't mind a King Snake myself. Good at getting rid of rodents and they eat other venomous snakes. I have never seen one in my area. Only Black Snakes and Copperheads.
 
I wouldn't mind a King Snake myself. Good at getting rid of rodents and they eat other venomous snakes. I have never seen one in my area. Only Black Snakes and Copperheads.

I hate snakes...:msp_angry:
But if there's one that gets a pardon from the death penalty, it's the black snake...
If ya got a big black snake in the barn, you don't have anything else!!

Copperheads are a vile creature with a miserable disposition...
 
When I was a kid, I went into Grandma's unlit garage to grab a rake off of the tool hanger apparatus... BIG SURPRISE! Black snake wrapped around another tool handle. I'll stop to chase one off of the road to save it from getting squashed, but I don't really like to get up close & personal w/ them.
 
Back
Top