crazyal
Super Member
I used pallets for a year or so but they rot pretty quickly and then just become a mess. Now I use pressure treated 2xwhat ever. Usually Home Depot will have some in their cull lumber box for real cheap.
I'm gonna say something that may surprise you: You do not want stacked stems neat and orderly. They are much easier to cut up when askew as opposed to neatly stacked where one log after another gets in the way of your sectional cutting. I purposely stack my stems this way as it speeds the process for me. You'll notice they are staggered and tilted. I first noticed this on the job and how sloppy piles got cut up faster than neat ones. Everyone's different with different ocd quotients they must adhere to. By the way, these are on old railroad ties
I have to agree with you here, having spent a lot of time recently cutting logs out of a pile that was stacked by an excavation service. There are several advantages to a messy pile. First, it is easy to get a hold of one end of a log to pull or roll it out of the pile. If you have a cant hook or a peavy hook, you won't easily get a hold of a log that is nestled in with a bunch of other logs, but if its end is sticking out, you can get a grip on it. Second, if a log is cross-wise with another log, you can often see-saw it very easily because it will tend to be balanced on its midsection. This will allow you to move a big log by hand that you could never lift if it was not teeter-tottered. Third, if you can't get a log out of the pile at all, you can just start cutting rounds off the free end until it's light enough to move.
If you have a grapple and can easily place the logs wherever you want them, then stack them neatly. But if you will be breaking down the pile by hand later, a messier pile may be better.
As for the suggestion to stack them in rounds: I wouldn't do it, but that's just me. I hate, hate, hate having to stack wood more times than I have to. I cut logs into rounds and leave the rounds in big piles that I dump out of the bed of the truck and then pile up with the loader. Then I split the rounds out of the pile and stack the split wood as I go. Seeing the messy pile of rounds motivates me to get splitting, whereas if they are neatly stacked, I tend to forget about them and then they're not ready to burn when I need them.
Here's what I decided to do:
http://www.arboristsite.com/firewood-heating-wood-burning-equipment/209943-3.htm#post3889813
These things can be treacherous to actually be on or under. If you have equipment that is picking out the logs before cutting that is one thing. If you are cutting directly from the pile, I'd make multiple piles only 3 or 4 ft high.