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

so I cut down this pine now what

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by jetjr, Mar 2, 2014.

  1. Scotty Overkill

    Scotty Overkill Administrator

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    Might be worth a test thread...maybe jetjr will volunteer? ;)
     
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  2. Oliver1655

    Oliver1655

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    It would make sense that the water in the round would gravity feed downward. This is one of the reasons a lot of folks stack that way in outdoor piles. Another is being teepee'd, the stacks would shed rain better.
     
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  3. basod

    basod

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    Where you located Jetjr?
    Freezing weather will help with the sap. Really really freezing cold will get the pine to a point of popping apart when split.
    Standing the rounds on end and a few days of direct sunlight may help speed checking in the ends which can aid in deciding where to swing the maul
     
  4. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Located along the Pa/Md border. Sure i am willing to give it a go. The two are white pines and not sure exactly of the other. I just hope in a month or two i can remember why i sat those rounds on end and the others lengthwise.:emb:
     
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  5. billb3

    billb3

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    I don't like leaving pine in rounds as they get full of log grubs
    plus they get soft, not punky, just soft
    might be the humidity here
    even splits will get soft in stacks out in the rain

    I used to keep pine in a old chicken coop nice and dry - would stay light and hard


    be careful if you're splitting it with hydraulics, when they 'pop' they can also go flying and not necessarily in the direction you'd expect. I've been hit in the shoulder.
     
  6. gmule

    gmule

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    Split that pine asap it will be ready next season. It is great for a quick hot fire. And if you can slow the draft down you can a decent burn with it. I can load the fire view with lodge pole and get 8-10 hour burns with it.
     
  7. jetjr

    jetjr

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    PHOTO_20140307_152946.jpg PHOTO_20140307_152954.jpg So I cut down two more pines a cedar and sweet gum. No great wood but at least the yard will look better. That's not hedges in the top pick its all stuff waiting to be chipped.
     
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  8. basod

    basod

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    Looks like my yard last February minus the snow....BOMBSCARE!!:thumbs:
    Got tired of the sweetgum balls falling in the yard and dropped 3 ~80' trees. The gum wood is not as bad as folks will have you believe - a bit of a booger to split but hydraulics take care of it. Make sure to top cover it or the fungus/shrooms will take over. Leaves a bit more coals & ash but burns similar to soft maple when seasoned a year or more.

    Best part is its right in your backyard
     
  9. billb3

    billb3

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    Last edited: Mar 7, 2014
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  10. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Took down another one at my brother in laws to make room for his addition PHOTO_20140308_082501.jpg
     
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  11. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Yea the bad thing is I tore up the yard like that last year too. Got the majority chipped up today. Other than some small junk. Was not to bad only got my truck hung up twice. Hopefully can get some grass growing.
     
  12. billb3

    billb3

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    that looks more like a norway spruce



    and a huge stump !
     
  13. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Could be I am not real good in evergreens. I think he's going to have boards cut out of the logs. Was a little hairy it was raked back towards the house pretty good. I've seen insurance commercials like that.
     
  14. Paul bunion

    Paul bunion

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    Does look like a Norway. The easy was to identify spruce is by the needle. Spruce has sharp needles. If you grab them and it hurts then it is a spruce.
     
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