In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

What do you use to carry wood from pile into the house?

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Marshel54, Dec 22, 2019.

  1. yooperdave

    yooperdave

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    "Milk crates....they're not just for splitting anymore!" :D
     
    fox9988, dingbat, unclefess and 14 others like this.
  2. Marshel54

    Marshel54

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    :D:rofl: :lol::rofl: :lol::rofl: :lol::rofl: :lol:
     
  3. metalcuttr

    metalcuttr

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    From the shed to the garage it travels by wheel barrow which parks til it needs refilling (usually about 2 to 3 days with our modest NW temps ). From the wheeler it goes up a short flight of stairs in one or two 5 gal. plastic buckets that are a little shorter and wider than standard. The buckets immediately go back downstairs because they are "unsightly". I keep a small expense magazine of wood on the hearth, about the two buckets full.
     
  4. papadave

    papadave

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    Wife made one of those [​IMG]from a small rug a couple years ago that I use infrequently. I can fit 5-6 splits inside, which is just about all I do without it, so I should use it more.
    Also bought one similar to this at a garage sale [​IMG] that I tried to use once. It has bars all the way front to back just above the tires and the wood wants to slide off. It needs a platform to be effective.
     
  5. Meche_03

    Meche_03

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    The kids and I use their wagons. Little red wagon with side boards and a mesh garden wagon rated for 800 pounds. Small rubber tires are always flat. Need to replace with airless tires but I have a compressor and a 15 year old to air up tires.

    3 kids and 2 wagons moves wood to the basement fairly fast. Keep half a rick in the basement dry and warm. Plan to expand wood rack to full Rick.
     
  6. SD Steve

    SD Steve

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    My sons and I use 3 old plastic milk crates. I hurt my upper back loading up the basement this year, Rhomboid Strain they called it. But nothing a little time off work and some physical therapy couldn't handle. But I did prove to myself that I am not 25 anymore. Turned 40 back in June. Need to space it out better next year. Don't over do it.
     
  7. Stinny

    Stinny

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    Something like this elec cart might be perfect for some here with bad backs, for moving firewood. It can easily handle a full load of stone, which would be much heavier than firewood stacked as high as you could get, with side fences added. Not sure how well it would climb stairs (with hinge down wheel ramps), but it might. Just a thought...

     
  8. Eric VW

    Eric VW Moderator

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    That works almost as gooder as Fire Flake!:D
     
  9. Mwalsh9152

    Mwalsh9152

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    I bring the wood into the 3 season porch with a wheelbarrow. Then I have two canvas bags that I got off Amazon to bring the wood inside. I usually only use both bags if my back is bothering me.
     
  10. Yawner

    Yawner

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    The electric wheelbarrow gizmo above is nice but it's $2,500! I looked into this for carting rounds and splits out of the woods and found some electric carts for less than $1,000, so, alternatives exist. Had pretty good reviews, too. The one I was rather interested in was less than $700.
     
  11. jtstromsburg

    jtstromsburg

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    The one gooder part about my basement placed stove. Wood goes down easily and usually by the wheelbarrow full.

    Closet under outside stairwell into man cave/stoveroom
    [​IMG]

    stairwell looking down
    [​IMG]

    Stairwell with hinged steps lifted for wood access from above
    [​IMG]


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     
  12. MAF143

    MAF143

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    Awesome set up! Easy Peasy... Man Cave with a BatCave entrance...
     
  13. buZZsaw BRAD

    buZZsaw BRAD

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    i currently use a ordinary plastic storage tote. Two hands balances the load evenly on your body rather than one side??? Only a few logs at once in your case???
    Ive tried hand logs carriers like that and too messy IMO/IME. I get tired of cleaning wood crumbs. By the fireplace crumbs are a given of course.
     
  14. Stumpy75

    Stumpy75

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    I use the cart like you show in pic number 2. It works good for me. Mine has pneumatic tires which need filling every fall, but other that, it's been nice to have for the past 5 years or so.
     
  15. Stinny

    Stinny

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    I'm not surprised there are cheaper versions. If you could find a used elec wheelchair, those motors & wheels would make a great power source for a cart too.
     
  16. Screwloose

    Screwloose

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    15771193814964998148000588210164.jpg
    I use 2 of these bags. I believe they came from a power company service truck. When carrying 1 it hurts my body but with 2 I do ok.
     
  17. OhioStihl

    OhioStihl

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    That is nice. Great setup.
     
  18. OhioStihl

    OhioStihl

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    I use an old leather tote from LL Bean. It’s been around as long as I remember. It is at least 35-40 years old and is tearing and showing its abuse. I’ve been looking for a replacement and thinking of Duluth Trading, they have a nice one but it is pricey.
     
  19. Screwloose

    Screwloose

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    I just wanted to say that you can get things custom made at most any canvas, boat cover or awning type shop for a great price. Basically your asking them to take some scraps that they throw out anyway and sew them into something that doesn't have to be "exact" or "blemish free".
     
  20. savemoney

    savemoney

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    I am using a Vermont Super Chuck Firewood cart. It keeps the load up high so no bending over to pull the wood off. I'm using mine to transport bags of pellets from the garage to the porch. The large wheels will go right through snow if it isn't too deep. Well balanced so you are only pulling it.
    upload_2019-12-23_13-51-39.png