Hardwood makes much better firewood and produce much more heat.
I cut soft wood mainly for camping wood.
I use a skidding winch on the tractor pto...works very well.
Agreed. Got three words for you, though: Eastern Bark Beetle
The things are tearing through the area killing every pine. I have acres of pines that are just not going to make it. A state forestry agent came by years ago, and she told me "those are all standing dead sooner or later - do the region a favor and cut every **** one of them down to slow the spread of the bugs."
It took a while, but I believe her. Problem is I am one guy against a lot of trees. I am mostly oak, beech, gum and poplar (mostly oak and beech) - but still got a few thousand pine out there between them all.
So I learn to burn pine. Having a wood gasifier helps a lot. The flue doesn't gum up and other than energy density, pine burns as good as anything else. I prefer it when I start the boiler "cold" because it burns fast and hot, so it will get the water up to heat faster than anything else. Once the boiler is hot, I generally build a base of white oak or beech, and then toss gum, pine, poplar, cherry...whatever on top. Works great.
I would not burn it in anything without a secondary chamber, though. Creosote makes a mess. But at 1700-1800 degrees I don't have a problem.