You guys never disappoint. /w3tcompact/icons/clever.gif
I think my questions have been answered, and then some. Sounds like the chips have value, so I can at least start pricing the rentals and/or hiring someone to do it. I've been pleasantly surprised in recent years to find that in addition to the yellow pages, there's always a good ol' boy not too far away who might just be able to help out for a "neighborly" fee. A part of country life I have yet to get used to.
Hard to totally generalize about what I'll be chipping. The predominant growth in the area is oak and pine, but it's... well, it's a brush pile. /w3tcompact/icons/hmm.gif I'd say it's all from healthy growth, but I can't be sure that some kind of cooties aren't hiding in there.
Like all brush piles (I assume), the stuff on the bottom is dried and somewhat aged, while the stuff on the top is pretty green. And I hear you, Gary -- untangling that mess will be the hard part /w3tcompact/icons/tongue.gif, but next time you're driving to California, feel free to hitch that 12"
chipper to your truck and spend a fun-filled weekend at my property. Free sandwiches and beer. /w3tcompact/icons/grin.gif
If nothing else, I'll gladly compost the stuff. I already have two tractor-sized compost piles going from my annual weed and leaf cleanups. I water 'em good for a while in the beginning, and then they seem to start cookin' on their own. The fun part is turning them over with my 'Bota. Good pile practice, and my wife thinks I'm working really hard. /w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif