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

Who dries/season wood by leaving in a pile

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by dennish, Mar 21, 2022.

  1. dennish

    dennish

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    I'm currently splitting next years wood and debating if I should stack it or just leave it in a pile through the summer. Wood is all soft wood, cedar, pine, and fir. I'm in Northern Ca. with hot dry summers. I realize I'll have to stack it before winter, but too much work for now. Thoughts.
     
  2. Ctwoodtick

    Ctwoodtick

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    Don’t just leave in a pile. Stack split wood off the ground (on rack or pallets) and preferably with cover on top only ( allowing sides to be open). In your climate, you’ll have softwood bone dry by fall no doubt. If left in a pile , you’ll have a pile of marginal crap to burn.
     
  3. Screwloose

    Screwloose

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    Piles don't work. Period.
     
  4. MikeInMa

    MikeInMa

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    Stack it. Air flow is needed. Plus, it'll look nicer

    Although, holzhausen's are found here and there.
     
  5. stuckinthemuck

    stuckinthemuck

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    I beg to differ.. I think they have their place, although very limited.. I split white pine into a pile, leave it for a year and then stack it under my porch in October for the upcoming burn season. Based on when I cut and split it, the space under my porch is usually taken up with the current season’s wood so I have a choice of stacking the wood twice or just leaving it in a pile until it’s ready.. mind you, I don’t do that with any of my hardwoods.. I do believe that stacked and top covered is they best way to ensure the wood dries as quickly as possible and suffers minimal loss from fungus or insects.. friend of mine placed a mesh tarp under his pile to keep the dirt off the wood at the bottom of his wood pile while he empties the wood shed of this years wood..something like this.. jrider also doesn’t stack. But I would assume that his customers do once he delivers their wood.

    12 ft. x 20 ft. Mesh All Purpose/Weather Resistant Tarp
     
  6. Eric Wanderweg

    Eric Wanderweg

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    I would be willing to run an experiment like this but there’s no way I’d throw everything directly on the ground. My guess is there’s too much moisture at ground level (at least where I live) that would keep the bottom splits from drying. I’d lay down a grid of pallets first, as a base.
     
  7. jo191145

    jo191145

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    I’ve tried it twice now. There won’t be a third attempt.
     
  8. Theashhole

    Theashhole

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    I threw some in a pile last year for a family friend and stacked it when delivered and she said it burned great, I found some shrooms on peices and others were nice n dry, she wants some more and I'm gonna stack that either here or there.

    Sent from my LE2127 using Tapatalk
     
  9. stuckinthemuck

    stuckinthemuck

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    How long was it in a pile and how long stacked before it was burned?
     
  10. LordOfTheFlies

    LordOfTheFlies

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    It's a good time now during spring to stack. Get it off the ground like others point out. The biggest benefit of that is to get some airflow underneath. You might not think it matters but it does. Who cares if it is soft wood or not. Stack it and do it right the first time. It's extra work to throw the pieces into a pile.....and then pick them back up and stack them again. Don't look at your entire pile and think you have to do it all - just take little bites and take your time and do a little every day and before you know it you will be done and glad you did it.
     
    Timberdog, metalcuttr, M2theB and 7 others like this.
  11. Theashhole

    Theashhole

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    Think it was piled the whole summer and stacked a few weeks before burning (I don't have an exact time on that) I was able to stack it in the direction of a good amount wind & sun.
    The wood was mostly hard maple I don't remember what else though.

    Sent from my LE2127 using Tapatalk
     
  12. Screwloose

    Screwloose

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    I guess a lot depends on the size of the pile. A cord or 2 maybe but I never had any luck with anything rather large .
     
  13. Yawner

    Yawner

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    I have a couple piles I am considering leave be. Because buyers here do not seem to seek seasoned wood. I’m serious! So, why bother. It is certainly more work and it doesn’t seem to matter to most. My thinking is I can sell about all I want from piles! That’s my thinking lately based on buyers comments this past season. But this is the south.
     
  14. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    Leaving you wood in a heap is like going into your house and leaving your clothing laying on the floor.
     
  15. jrider

    jrider

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    Piling your wood up does work if in full sun. I've been doing it successfully for over 25 years now. From my experience though it only works well out in a field with zero shade. I once tried it in what I thought was a sunny spot in a clearing in the woods and it would never do that again. Also, where my piles are located is a thick layer of bark and splitter debris so the wood is not in contact with the ground. I do think location and climate play a big role in this as well. If you don't have hot long summers with a lot of sun, I don't think they would work as well.
     
  16. jrider

    jrider

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    How sunny was the spot and how big was the pile?
     
  17. sirbuildalot

    sirbuildalot

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    Loose thrown piles, especially on dirt never seem to work. They suck up all the moisture from the ground, rot prematurely, don't get adequate sun, and harbor more rodents.
     
  18. buzz-saw

    buzz-saw

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    Right now I have a pile , Planning on getting it stacked over the next month or so. Chipmunks won't be happy when they get the eviction notice.
     
  19. Sirchopsalot

    Sirchopsalot

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    dennish ,
    Id imagine as others have said, stacking will yeld better benefits. Maybe try stacking/covering half of your supply, and mounding the other half. See what happens.
    We had a wet summer here last year, so just against the odd wet year here....stacking and top covering always.
    Sca
     
    Last edited: Mar 22, 2022
  20. Sandhillbilly

    Sandhillbilly

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    I did it once before I joined up with you folks. Laid out a base of 6 or 8 pallets and split up a bunch of elm that was taken alive 3-4 months previous. Split it into a loader bucket and dumped it on the pallets. Probably a little more than one cord. Sat for better than a year and still was pretty wet.
    I have since learned the error of my ways, never again. It all gets stacked now.