This is the big event our neighbors were needing those trees cleaned up for. The south edge of their woods is next to our north property line back behind the two smaller lots between us. This article even mentions John and his loader... Galion, Ohio Hosts Historic Bhutanese Hindu Gathering July 16
You look a little warm there, Monty... Excellent work on some massive trees. Glad everything went according to plans, safely done. Well done, brother, well done
Got some time today to cut up and noodle about 1/3 of the 7 trailer loads from the White Oaks we cut over at the neighbor's. Still needs split to stove size firewood but getting it broke down to rounds and noodled to manageable chunks and up on pallets is the priority for now. This is in the pines processing area. Most of the wood we trailered home is up in the upper pasture processing area. There's probably 12 or more trailer loads up there. I can get 2 rows of 21" rounds and splits on the 40' long group of pallets. I've been meaning to get down here with some spray to get the grass and weeds away from the pallets but as you can see, I'm a slacker...
I'm hoping it makes a HUGE pile. Still a lot of work to do to get it into the 3 year rotation, but like you say, I'll keep putting an hour or two on it whenever I can.
Did some cutting tonight. Ran a tank of mix through 3 saws and got a lot more broken down and put on pallets. https://www.youtube.com/watch/QapR1PTKz44
I try to cut my firewood as close to 21" as I can. I can shoehorn a 22" split into my woodstove but that leaves NO margin for error. I normally cut most everything with either the 18" on my MS250 or the 24 inchers on the 357 or 362. I got out the 288 with the 32" on it cuz some of this was oversized and some was wonky at the crotch and I wanted as straight of cuts as I can get on the wonky pieces. This was a rare straight log that I just didn't feel like digging out of the pile to put up at the sawmill. Normally my firewood is the "seconds" that won't make lumber. The 288 is just a load of fun to run so it gets the noodling chores as well when it's out... It just plain old tosses chips and noodles and makes the work go quick. It also doesn't take it long to drink a tank of mix, but it gets a bunch of work done while its sucking the tank dry... My favorite saw these days for anything over 22" for sure. We have some knarly stuff in the upper pasture lot that'll take John's 660 with the 42" bar. We'll probably do some racing when we get to cutting up there... Boys and our toys
Finished getting all the pile broken down and on pallets in the pines processing area. There is 48' of pallets that I get two rows on so I'm guessing about 4 cord of wood in this area waiting on the splitter. I have a few rounds of Hedge on the backside and a dozen or so rounds of Honey Locust mixed in. This is all slated for burning in the 27-28 heating season. It will probably not get split till winter hits and I'll spend a few evenings splitting under the light bar on the truck. I sweat a lot less in Nov / Dec than in August... MS362CM got the call today to finish up the last of the cutting and noodling. I'm glad to have it all up on pallets in the sun, but it's still needing some serious splitter time. I took 2 full loader bucket loads of nuglies over to the neighbors fire pit to light up our beer drinking contests and general stupid shenanigans...