165masseyky
Bronze Member
I started out this year with some wood that I had split last year, in that note I stack my wood next to the wood furnace and before you know it the stuff will light up with just a torch... It also helps to have the dehumidifier going.... I don't know if my wood would ever reach 20% my dehumidifier reads around 35% this time of the year...
And there in lies the issue. Seasoning wood is just that seasoning. If you can dry the wood during the hot summer months it will get to below 25% moisture in very arid areas. But if you live in more temperate climate areas you may find this a bit taxing. Unless you have a little help from a drying house like I described in an earlier post. If the air moisture content is high you will only open air dry to that moisture content and as the ambient temps drop the time frame gets longer. The drying house is really a simple build and if you are selling firewood it will pay for itself in the first season. Because when all the other guys are worried about being caught selling high moisture content wood you can get that late season sells market in your pocket at a really good rate. I would seriously look into doing the drying house build in the forested and coastal areas because if you think of it there is a reason why tress don't grow in the dessert....Low humidity...and in the high humidity areas(forested,coastal,plains)trees are abundant.So keeping seasoned wood at below 25% is hard to do in the areas that average much higher. Not to mention if you live and deliver in an area that is boarding other states and you may deliver over into those states all wood must be heat treated to 165'f for 35 minutes to kill insects and or disease in wood that will be transported across state lines.