Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste

   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #61  
Log chipping is back breaking work.
 
   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #62  
Log chipping is back breaking work.
Indeed it is. Even when I owned a significantly larger chipper than the OP is talking about renting, I wouldn't have tried to chip that stuff. Way too hard on the body and the equipment.
 
   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #63  
A few years back, I lost a couple of dozen trees to a downburst. Around here, we call it a blow down, which can occur during an intense thunderstorm. Mostly White Pine and Hemlock with 5" to 8" trunks which were no good for firewood. I limbed them and piled the slash, which I later burned after our first snowfall.

I piled the trunks at the edge of one of my fields where I occasionally do some target practice. The ground is sloped and I had been planning on leveling it to make a proper shooting range. I dug it out and used the spoils to bury the logs to make a backstop.

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   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #64  
Not relevant for the OP, but I had a friend who was a road contractor. What to do with all those green trees? He would put them in a large pile, and then he had a wagon with an engine and an airplane propeller that he would aim at the pile. Everything burned!
 
   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #65  
Mostly White Pine and Hemlock with 5" to 8" trunks which were no good for firewood.
I'm curious about that wood being no good for firewood. I would burn it in my wood stove. I would split the 8" into quarters and the 5" in half. I burn mostly alder and hemlock. About 90 percent alder.
Eric
 
   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #66  
I'm curious about that wood being no good for firewood. I would burn it in my wood stove. I would split the 8" into quarters and the 5" in half. I burn mostly alder and hemlock. About 90 percent alder.
Eric
A lot of rot and insect damage. Likely why they came down in the wind.
 
   / Ideas to dispose of land clearing waste #67  
I'm curious about that wood being no good for firewood. I would burn it in my wood stove. I would split the 8" into quarters and the 5" in half. I burn mostly alder and hemlock. About 90 percent alder.
Eric
In the eastern US, for the most part, softwoods aren't considered worth bothering with for firewood, except for, occasionally, outdoor boiler use. Part of that is the fact that they don't have the "good" types of softwoods (Western larch, Doug fir, Lodgepole pine, Western white pine) that we have in the west. Part of it is they have a lot more variety of higher quality hardwoods to choose from, so there's no reason to settle for the low quality softwoods (hemlock, Eastern white pine, Scotch pine, red pine) available
 

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