Shoot, I think it looks great! I piece my sheds/cover together out of nothing other than pallets or broken down pallets.....yes, I did buy some treated last year before surgery, but I needed "Quick." Hope that judgement was positive enuff for ya I personally don't care what something I've built to contain wood and keep it dry looks like.... My neighbors don't pay our inexpensive winter electric bill, and I ain't about to start holding out my hand. I am thankful to have at least menial carpentry skills to cover our firewood. I say keep going NHMM..... If you want to blame me to your wife, I say cover the whole backyard!
When in doubt, air it out! I don't worry about covering until maybe the end of the warm/dry part of the summer, and even then only when I plan on burning that particular stack that coming winter. But as others have said, if you are gonna cover before that time, top cover only. I actually move what I need for the winter into a 3 sided shed to keep snow off but still allow some airflow
As usual I still debate on to cover or not... some say if you don't cover the moisture/water will cause the wood to get fungus...obvy as shown in picture I have some covered. Their about 4 feet high I guess give or take . I'm going to pick up more tomorrow. I constantly check Craigslist everyday for people giving away logs or downed trees. I'm definitely going to get a moisture Meter. Someday I'll be able to tell the different woods and kinda apart. I should label each pallet cuz their all different kinds.
Yeah, sounds like they were keeping busy with the wet wood alright! I don't have enough "cover" to cover all of my wood, so I mostly just cover what I'm planning to burn for the next year or two. One thing I've learned with top covering is that it can work against you if it's not shedding water properly. I use some vinyl siding leftovers; and that works much better than the blue tarps for me, which tend to get holes in them and pool water if they're not taught. All that water eventually drains onto the wood below, causing these spots to get wetter than they would have if you left them uncovered.
Nicholas it depends on your situation that is exactly what I am building as my storage spot is 200 yards from where I put wood in winter to use. I also have a tractor so with forks in cubes real easy to transport boxes without reading stacking over..
I don't like to go far for my firewood, or re-stack it each year, so it's covered behind the work shop with the stove just inside the back door. Fixed the wood splitter so it doesn't need a catch pan any longer or a support hydraulic container!
I Use a heavy black tarp over top of my stacks. Acts like a solar cover with the sun. I do not cover the sides of my stacks until winter.
It seasons it much faster than letting it get soaked with rain water. I've had wood season within 4 months and was getting well below the recommended moisture content. I never burn wood with fungus. That's where the horrid wood smoke smell comes from. Thus leading to smoke trolls complaining about wood stoves. That also leads to eye and skin irritation.
Perhaps you misunderstood Doug. I was not talking about top covering the wood but just the part about covering the sides. It will not season faster if you cover the sides but instead will hold moisture in. Now if it is dry when you cover the sides and you are worried about rain or snow hitting the sides, you are worrying needlessly. Wood is not a sponge (unless it is punky) so the rain that hits the sides will not soak into the wood; it is just surface moisture that will usually dry within 24 hours after the rain stops. Guess I learned something new today too. I've never noticed horrid wood smoke smell when burning any wood with a fungus. But then, of course, we don't get the wood smoke smell in the house so we don't worry about it. I have burned some in brush piles and campfires but never had a problem with it. No, I'm not exactly new when it comes to wood fires and smoke smells.