Oh boy... hard to tell from the limited info.
The piled logs?? What species?? Cut green?? Cut winter or summer?? In contact with the ground??
Standing-dead elm is about perfect when the bark falls off the trunk... everything above the first crotch should be ready-to-burn, below that drys in a couple-few weeks. Round here it takes a good two years for them to get to that point. Personally, I'd leave 'em stand and take 'em down this early fall (like late September/early October) and move 'em directly into the house after splitting.
Like
Dirtboy posted, I'd be concerned with the piled logs.
I'd be startin' on them first, see what's happenin' inside... the standing-dead will keep a few more weeks (and likely get better).
But... I ain't where you are... am I??
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