Guess I need to take some pictures. Look at them closely. I'd say some are piles of GREEN wood, and all are taken in the summer. You also need to study your PNW geography. Spokane is a whole different climate than Seattle.
How come these pictures aren't taken in November or December? Because then you'd see a sodden dark looking pile. Later on, mushrooms would be poking out.
Nice try, but one has to cover the top of woodpiles outside to get dry wood. I'll take a picture of firewood that has been stored outside, uncovered and show you that the wood in your photos is newly stacked and gathered. I've got some sodden, moss covered stuff that's been on the ground. That's another thing. The bottom rows are going to be wet. Very very wet. Slugs like it, as do sowbugs. I just stacked soggy wood that was dumped, like in the pictures, in a kind of pile. The outside sticks, having sat all two months of fairly dry weather, looked fine. The inside sticks had fungus starting, slugs, slime, and were wet.
Also, where'd you get that picture of High BTU wood? It says Seattle, but it looks more like it is on the dry side of the state, which is not Seattle.
Nice try but Spiderman, you know nothing about our climatic zones. Got any pictures of uncovered stacks from Forks, WA? Aberdeen, WA? Darrington, WA? Stuff that isn't newly cut, but wood that has been there a year, on the ground, exposed.
How come these pictures aren't taken in November or December? Because then you'd see a sodden dark looking pile. Later on, mushrooms would be poking out.
Nice try, but one has to cover the top of woodpiles outside to get dry wood. I'll take a picture of firewood that has been stored outside, uncovered and show you that the wood in your photos is newly stacked and gathered. I've got some sodden, moss covered stuff that's been on the ground. That's another thing. The bottom rows are going to be wet. Very very wet. Slugs like it, as do sowbugs. I just stacked soggy wood that was dumped, like in the pictures, in a kind of pile. The outside sticks, having sat all two months of fairly dry weather, looked fine. The inside sticks had fungus starting, slugs, slime, and were wet.
Also, where'd you get that picture of High BTU wood? It says Seattle, but it looks more like it is on the dry side of the state, which is not Seattle.
Nice try but Spiderman, you know nothing about our climatic zones. Got any pictures of uncovered stacks from Forks, WA? Aberdeen, WA? Darrington, WA? Stuff that isn't newly cut, but wood that has been there a year, on the ground, exposed.