Low of 21.4 °F last night, alligator juniper easily lights up off of the bed of coals.
This weeks haul. If I had an alligator juniper, honey locust and Bradford pear that I wanted taken down, I wouldn't be giving the firewood to the...
Just letting people use their imaginations. That's far better than anything I could say....
Got down to 20.1 °F Restarted the fire with alligator juniper, plenty of coals for an easy relight, then threw in some honey locust to heat the...
Siberian Elm, people here call it Chinese Elm or pizz elm. I'm guessing everyone in my area that calls it bad has burned it well before 2 years of...
Wait what....? Oh geez..... I need to pay as much attention to my posts as I do in the field. It won't get me injured or killed, but it'll sure...
Box Elder? I can't believe nobody here said it yet.
Go on.....
18.9 °F Getting some juniper going off the coals from last night.
As of 8:45 mst I have 27.5 °F Made a fire of juniper to get a few large pieces of apricot going Looks like the first day of winter has arrived in...
24.3°f , it actually cooled off last night.
Great video, I love to see people show what they do.
Got down to 19 °F last night, started the fire with juniper to get to oak going.
29.7 °F and not complaining one bit after seeing some of these other posts.....
Best that I've burned, Black Locust or any type of Locust, Honey or Sunburst and even Purple Robe. They all burn for a bit and put off a lot of heat.
Don't, walk away from it. If you were familiar with working in this field you wouldn't be asking this question and receiving this reply. I am...
Lucky.....
I can not imagine a smell worse than unseasoned Cottonwood. What you are speaking of, as I've said, is completely foreign to me. Good luck to you sir.
and comes right back as soon as it rains
I've no experience with Chestnut, but it sounds like it has the smell of Cottonwood. I can't stand the stuff. It may burn clean but the smell of...