No shed, but if I'm allowed to play I have red oak, pin oak, red maple, ash, sycamore, ailanthus, white oak, beech, black birch, cherry, shagbark, pignut or mockernut - never can remember which is which, Norway maple and a single piece of sugar maple. All under plywood pieces and tarps.
Oak, oak and more oak......Also beech, maple cherry ash and yellow birch and white birch...Not sure what else...
I got birch, white, yellow, silver and black.... maple sugar, red, silver and Norway ... Ash.. popular, apple, elm cherry a little oak maybe a couple others...
My "shed" (under the deck) consists of 1/4 cord left of box elder, started with 1/3, 2.25 cords of red oak (maybe a little white), and half cord of elm left from last year. So a little over 3 cords when I started.
Red oak, paper birch, elm, shagbark hickory, box elder, cherry, poplar, locust. That is what I remember.
We need to write stuff down as we get older, eh Erik B? I'm always taking a note here, jotting down something there... Just hard to remember where I leave my notes Of course I'm not 43 til this coming Sunday, but I got started young
No wood shed. Mulberry, white and pin oak, honey and black locust, Siberian elm, ash, yellow pine (old barn beams), hard and soft maple, along with a small amount of hedge posts. I could be forgetting a few, but only a few sticks of each of them.
Thats alot of birch bogydave, what 10 or 15 cords. I got douglas fir, western juniper. Tamarack, lodgepole pine, ponderosa pine.
Doug Fir, Big Leaf Maple, white ( paper) Birch, Elm, Black Locust, a little black walnut, and more Doug Fir
No woodshed yet. In the stacks I have at least 50% ash. Then I have wild black cherry, mulberry, apple, carpathian walnut and soon a bit of sugar maple. I trimmed a large branch from my yard tree and it will be going to the pile. Now all I need to do is finish the area where my stove goes in my new home so that I can have a place to burn it all. In the future I expect to have a much bigger percentage of ash since I planted trees on 15 acres around 25 years ago and almost 20% of that planting was ash.