Tractors and wood! Show your pics

   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,061  
At least they do not have a hole in them. :shocked:

I wish we could use pine cones for toilet paper...I live in a house with 4 daughters and a wife...we go through an awful lot of toilet paper!
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,062  
Typically my production goes like this:

It takes about 7 decent sized trees to make a cord of wood. I have 7 chokers on my skidder, so I pull about 1 cord per twitch. Counting twitches per day gives me how many cords of wood I cut per day. Generally, I cut a twitch every hour, so about 1 cord per hour.

So what do you consider a decent sized tree? DBH? Seems to me that 7 "decent sized trees" would be more than a cord by quite a bit. A decent sized tree to me (about all I have here is Loblolly pine ) is about 16-18" DBH and about 60-75 feet tall
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,063  
So what do you consider a decent sized tree? DBH? Seems to me that 7 "decent sized trees" would be more than a cord by quite a bit. A decent sized tree to me (about all I have here is Loblolly pine ) is about 16-18" DBH and about 60-75 feet tall
that’s a bit bigger than what we see up here. It takes a lot longer to grow a tree up here as we only have a 3 month growing season, and most of the trees that size were cut a century ago. (or more) That Loblolly you mention has about 66 cubic feet of
solid wood in it, or 2/3 of a cord... using 18” butt and 6” top diameter.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,064  
So what do you consider a decent sized tree? DBH? Seems to me that 7 "decent sized trees" would be more than a cord by quite a bit. A decent sized tree to me (about all I have here is Loblolly pine ) is about 16-18" DBH and about 60-75 feet tall

Here in the VT/NH area, it takes about seven 8 or 9" DBH (diameter at breast height) hardwood trees to make a cord. This varies a bit with species and site conditions, and I'm sure would vary a bit with different regions of the country.

A forester gave me this chart that he uses for estimating standing firewood. He uses it to mark 3-cord firewood lots on some cooperatively owned forestland in our area (I'm one of the co-owners). We've found his marking to be fairly accurate - often we'll get a hair more than the 3 cords he calculates from the chart.

View attachment 626919
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,065  
Here in the VT/NH area, it takes about seven 8 or 9" DBH (diameter at breast height) hardwood trees to make a cord. This varies a bit with species and site conditions, and I'm sure would vary a bit with different regions of the country.

A forester gave me this chart that he uses for estimating standing firewood. He uses it to mark 3-cord firewood lots on some cooperatively owned forestland in our area (I'm one of the co-owners). We've found his marking to be fairly accurate - often we'll get a hair more than the 3 cords he calculates from the chart.

View attachment 626919

I would think that firewood estimator would vary depending on area due to differing species. I'm thinking an oak would have a larger crown (lots more big branches useable for firewood) than say a Loblolly ( no I don't use the pine for firewood). But on an average it might be close.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,066  
I would think that firewood estimator would vary depending on area due to differing species. I'm thinking an oak would have a larger crown (lots more big branches useable for firewood) than say a Loblolly ( no I don't use the pine for firewood). But on an average it might be close.

Crown wood and processors are a poor match. Don't see it done commercially. "bring 'em in small(10") and straight!"
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,067  
Here in the VT/NH area, it takes about seven 8 or 9" DBH (diameter at breast height) hardwood trees to make a cord. This varies a bit with species and site conditions, and I'm sure would vary a bit with different regions of the country.

A forester gave me this chart that he uses for estimating standing firewood. He uses it to mark 3-cord firewood lots on some cooperatively owned forestland in our area (I'm one of the co-owners). We've found his marking to be fairly accurate - often we'll get a hair more than the 3 cords he calculates from the chart.

View attachment 626919

Thanks for posting the chart. Might not be perfect but better than nothing.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,068  
Crown wood and processors are a poor match. Don't see it done commercially. "bring 'em in small(10") and straight!"

Yeah, I'm just a little guy cutting to heat my house and supply myself with lumber, I live on my 100 acres and cut what I have..
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,069  
I would think that firewood estimator would vary depending on area due to differing species. I'm thinking an oak would have a larger crown (lots more big branches useable for firewood) than say a Loblolly ( no I don't use the pine for firewood). But on an average it might be close.

As already noted in my original post: "This varies a bit with species and site conditions, and I'm sure would vary a bit with different regions of the country." Different regions and different sites do tend to have different form factors.

Around here, "firewood" means "hardwood". No one harvests softwoods for firewood unless they have no choice (well, with the exception of those folks who are determined to give outdoor wood boilers a bad name by burning anything from their kids' dirty diapers to freshly cut White Pine to the wet, half rotten mess they scrounged from a neighbor's 5 year old storm damage). So I have no experience applying that table to softwoods. We're cutting Red Oak, White Oak, Beech, Hickory, Red Maple, Sugar Maple, Black Birch, Ash, Black Locust, occasionally White Birch, etc.

The chart is not always spot-on, but then it's not intended for figuring an individual cord of wood: it's intended to be used to estimate cords of firewood per acre for someone intending to harvest multiple acres. Having said that, we've found it fairly accurate for the 3-cord lots our forester marks.

Thanks for posting the chart. Might not be perfect but better than nothing.

It does make a handy guideline. Over the past 10 years or so, we've harvested about 150 cords of firewood off the group-owned land I mentioned. We keep good records, since we need to report forest management activities each year to stay in Vermont's "Use Value Tax Program". By agreement of the group, anything under 3" diameter must be left in the forest to rot and return nutrients to the soil, so most of us are only harvesting down to a 3 or 4" top, which matches up with the table's "4 inch top" fairly well. We've found our 3-cord marked firewood lots to come out very close to the prediction - usually slightly over 3 cords. Only once has someone complained of being significantly under, and he had only a little over 1.5 cords, so we suspect either he missed some marked trees, or the forester messed up.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #10,070  
Yeah, I'm just a little guy cutting to heat my house and supply myself with lumber, I live on my 100 acres and cut what I have..

Same here. Since most of my firewood harvesting is targeted at cleaning up storm damage (there seems to be WAY too much of that over these past several years), culling overcrowded, poorly formed, or diseased trees in an effort to release the "good" ones for a better growth rate, someone with a firewood processor might not be overly thrilled with what I pull out.
 

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