smfcpacfp
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2007
- Messages
- 1,313
- Tractor
- Kubota B3030HSDC
Ok the first picture is this year's firewood for some last minute drying before going in the house. I stacked it with the front end loader (about 6 cords). I store oall of the wood I will use for the year in a corner of my basement. It has been drying for a month, so it isn't very dry. I won't use it until January.
After I got the above wood cut and split, I started to think about what to do with the 19 cords that I will use for the 2 - 3 years after this year. Where I had stacked firewood previously wasn't going to work anymore so I thought I would check the Internet to see if there was a creative way to stack wood that didn't involve buying posts, and some sort of way to keep the wood off of the ground, and I came upon something referred to as a "holz hausen" German for wood house. As a matter of fact someone on this forum constructed one and wrote about it, and posted a few pictures.
Traditionally the holz hausen is a cylinder, 10' in diameter and 10' feet tall and should hold about 6 full cords of wood. You can see how it is laid out from the pictures below.
You have a circle of wood around the perimeter and your goal is to keep the outer wall pointing to the center and sloped downward, so if it were to collapse, it would fall inward. In the center, you stack wood vertically to aid in drying and of course stop any collapsing.
Traditionally you put a stick 10' high in the center standing straight up and put a marker at 8'. When you can see the marker the wood is dry enough to burn (I guess 20% shrinkage). Theoretically this should take 3 months. I didn't bother with the stick since it will be drying for about a year.
I wonder if my neighbors are wondering, "What is he doing?"

After I got the above wood cut and split, I started to think about what to do with the 19 cords that I will use for the 2 - 3 years after this year. Where I had stacked firewood previously wasn't going to work anymore so I thought I would check the Internet to see if there was a creative way to stack wood that didn't involve buying posts, and some sort of way to keep the wood off of the ground, and I came upon something referred to as a "holz hausen" German for wood house. As a matter of fact someone on this forum constructed one and wrote about it, and posted a few pictures.
Traditionally the holz hausen is a cylinder, 10' in diameter and 10' feet tall and should hold about 6 full cords of wood. You can see how it is laid out from the pictures below.
You have a circle of wood around the perimeter and your goal is to keep the outer wall pointing to the center and sloped downward, so if it were to collapse, it would fall inward. In the center, you stack wood vertically to aid in drying and of course stop any collapsing.
Traditionally you put a stick 10' high in the center standing straight up and put a marker at 8'. When you can see the marker the wood is dry enough to burn (I guess 20% shrinkage). Theoretically this should take 3 months. I didn't bother with the stick since it will be drying for about a year.
I wonder if my neighbors are wondering, "What is he doing?"


