That’s dedication, or is it necessity?Ahh just get on with it
The worst bit is getting started
8 Steres here
View attachment 29378
Everyone of them carried up 8 steps and nearly stacked
View attachment 29379
Just the three rows on the left took me 2 short days.
Nothing is easy when stacking firewood. Unless you have help, this year I'm on my own.Ahh just get on with it
The worst bit is getting started
8 Steres here
View attachment 29378
Everyone of them carried up 8 steps and nearly stacked
View attachment 29379
Just the three rows on the left took me 2 short days.
Nice view !Ahh just get on with it
The worst bit is getting started
8 Steres here
View attachment 29378
Everyone of them carried up 8 steps and nearly stacked
View attachment 29379
Just the three rows on the left took me 2 short days.
We dont have to cut nor split. We buy unseasoned as we have the space to dry. I have to agree every year it takes longer to work up the enthusiasm to move from drive to those open air piles then after a year from the open air to covered storage.Thinking we would have a quick sale, I gave away a shedload of firewood....admittedly pretty rubbish TBH or not very seasoned. I have been foraging.
And TBH, although I love an open fire and my missus does especially....wherever we go next, I'd be happy with a radiator. It really is such a b*llache cutting the wood, seasoning it, dragging it up to be split, storing it.
Everybody buys unseasoned logs. It's just the gullibility that varies.We dont have to cut nor split. We buy unseasoned as we have the space to dry. I have to agree every year it takes longer to work up the enthusiasm to move from drive to those open air piles then after a year from the open air to covered storage.
Yep it's finding the time!I'm trying to find time to stack firewood as well. Up to neck in on going house renovation but need to get it off the ground shortly.
Having an issues comprehending a stere, our face cord is 8' x 4' x 16" .Ahh just get on with it
The worst bit is getting started
8 Steres here
View attachment 29378
Everyone of them carried up 8 steps and nearly stacked
View attachment 29379
Just the three rows on the left took me 2 short days.
Funny!A stere is a unit of measure designed to make it impossible for the customer to see if he has received what he has paid for. Well that’s the cynics view.
1 stere = 1 cubic metre of unsplit logs 1m long. Every time the logs are cut and split the volume is reduced. My logs are 50cm which reduces the delivered volume by about 20% .
The logs aren't perfectly straight, so the longer they are the more gaps you'll have between them caused by waviness and the like. Cut shorter they'll pack more efficiently, so the same pile of wood will take up less volume.Funny!
But not sure why cutting and chopping means the wood takes up less space?
Well that’s a good example, but then if you start off with a tree trunk and cut it up it can’t be as efficiently put together space wise as it was, was what I was thinking. But absolutely understand your point.As an example Ian imagine a box full of large stones, then break the stones into smaller ones. They will take up less space.
well now that is a good point.The logs aren't perfectly straight, so the longer they are the more gaps you'll have between them caused by waviness and the like. Cut shorter they'll pack more efficiently, so the same pile of wood will take up less volume.
Is this a standard cut lenghth (50cm), our standard length is 40plus cm.(16")A stere is a unit of measure designed to make it impossible for the customer to see if he has received what he has paid for. Well that’s the cynics view.
1 stere = 1 cubic metre of unsplit logs 1m long. Every time the logs are cut and split the volume is reduced. My logs are 50cm which reduces the delivered volume by about 20% .

