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 You Should Be Doing: May, June, July

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Grizzly Adam, Apr 8, 2014.

  1. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam Guest

    Looking for any suggestions of what type of tasks should be done by woodcutters in the months of a May, June, and July.
     
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  2. Oliver1655

    Oliver1655

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    Cut, split, stack on pallets.

    Attend Charity Cuts.

    Build more sheds for storing wood.

    Mow grass, ...
     
  3. Mitch Newton

    Mitch Newton

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    Looking for morels in the month of May:cool:
     
  4. SolarandWood

    SolarandWood

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    1. replace motor on splitter
    2. get the rest of last fall's cut split
    3. load next seasons burn shed with all wood available that will be dry in time
    4. figure out how short i am on dry wood for next year
    5. shop CL hard for wood that is "burnable" now and will be as close as possible to dry by fall
    6. finish loading shed with fall cut so it has a chance of being ready for 2015-2016
    7. get off ash and get back to 3+ years ahead so 1-6 isn't mission critical next year like it is this year
     

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  5. Woody Stover

    Woody Stover

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    Cutting more wood, trying to get stay ahead of all the girl stoves I gotta feed. :(
     
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  6. Loon

    Loon

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    Just got word that me and and my buddy across the road are gonna be haying 8 of the 11 fields
    AGAIN this year :hair: in his 80's and just wont quit :yes:

    Also gonna be staining the house at some point and some tree cutting when the time allows ;)
     
  7. coal reaper

    coal reaper

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    Burn uglies in the fire pit and drink berrs.
     
  8. My IS heats my home

    My IS heats my home

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    Anything I haven't finished stacking in April gets done in May. I put aside wood I will use for camping and the firepit, that gets stacked at another site. I have a second wood site, I will periodically visit the site when construction is slow and buck and stack there. For the most part, unless I get a scrounge, May, June and July is quiet for firewood for me
     
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  9. basod

    basod

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    Open the pool, crank the tunes, keep the cooler full...and the occasional cannonball after sweating up a storm putting up a half cord(on a cool early morning)
    Probably be harvesting cukes, pickling and blackberry jamming come late June.

    If you have the right system of efficient processing down and burn 5-6cords or less a year(I'm 2-3/yr here) I see no reason to dedicate anymore than 2days/cord(maybe more if transported longer distances).

    We should be enjoying the natural warmth of the summer:drunk:(assumptions above made on the 3yr plan being in the bank already)
     
  10. Oliver1655

    Oliver1655

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    I can't stand the cold like I did when younger so I do most of my fire wood when it is above 40°F. 100°F in the shade works for me. (A breeze is appreciated when it is that warm.)
     
  11. Scotty Overkill

    Scotty Overkill Administrator

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    Everyone has great suggestions above!

    I think late spring is a great time to clean and "summer-ize" the woodstoves, harvesting, splitting and restocking our wood stores, doing yard maintenance/pruning tasks around the house. Also a good time to clean up the saws and prep them for the next cutting adventure (although mine never get a rest YEAR ROUND).

    Also it's that time of year where we'll be doing lots of DIY projects around our houses, doing lots of outdoor cooking, swimming and camping, and the like.......
     
  12. bogydave

    bogydave

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    Go fishing & grow a garden so I have high energy healthy food
    So I have the energy to refill the empty section of the woodshed in August
    & CSS 7 cords of wood in the fall.

    Will be burning lots of fire pit fires to cook some of the food.
     
  13. Pallet Pete

    Pallet Pete Moderator

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    Cleaning the yard, fixing stacks and cutting odd size pieces left over from winter. I also cleaned the stove up the other day because it hit 64F...
     
  14. Scotty Overkill

    Scotty Overkill Administrator

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    I did a full clean - out of the stove and fireplace yesterday as well. I was pleased with the results, too. First time I had to clean ash out in a month (burning mostly red oak, beech, ash and red maple), flues were basically just sooty.....no creosote, other than a little on the spark arrestor screens!

    Once the ground dries out a little I'll get the garden tilled and prepped for our veggies (only doing a small garden this year).
     
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  15. HittinSteel

    HittinSteel

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    Great answer. I sit back at my fire pit drinking beers and admiring the winter's hard work.
     
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  16. thewoodlands

    thewoodlands

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    The list is long Grizz but the first thing we'll do is hang some new gates (two twelve footers)up to block ATV's from our property, after that I'll start cutting.
     
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  17. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam Guest

    Just keep throwing ideas against the wall, some are sticking!
     
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  18. thewoodlands

    thewoodlands

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    1. Hang Gates
    2. Cut downed wood, includes shoulder season wood
    3. split & stack it
    4. Check trails after our first wind event, usually happens in late May
    5. trail maintenance / fill in holes with pine needles & wood chips
    6. open up some old trails that are blocked
    7. take care of Ice Storm damage around the house
    8. Make sure the Brook is wide open before winter hits
    9. Make sure I take a picture, maybe two of all the work\
    10. I left out some stuff but this should keep me busy
     
  19. coal reaper

    coal reaper

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    when is a good time of year to prune trees for timber stand improvement?
     
  20. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam Guest

    According to the expert from Iowa State on the radio, pruning should be done while the tree is dormant-- either in late autumn or early spring.
     
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