Moving Firewood

   / Moving Firewood #41  
dmccarty said:
The problem?

M I C E! :eek::mad:

My wood piles have loads of mice in them. I have found three mice nest so far this year. And we have not burned much wood since its been so warm. We stopped bringing the pallets to the back porch because of the mess and the mice. We had 4-5 mice in the house a year or so ago and they got in because of the palletized wood. What a ^&*() mess they made. No more palletized wood.

But what to do about the danged mice?

Later,
Dan

Mornin Dan,
Yeah tell me about the danged mice !!! :( I have a bunch of wood stacked up in the basement near the woodstove. The problem is that one of my kids that doesnt live home anymore forgot their key to get into the house, so they know I sometimes leave the back bilco door unlocked. They went in the house that way and neglected to close the door at the bottom of the stairs ! :( Well I got back home from being up in Vt and found nesting material that the dang mice brought down the stairs, my worst fear was confirmed the other day when I saw one of the little monsters down there ! Im in the process of trying to eradicate the little monsters as we speak ! Your right you dont want them, even in your basement ! ;)
 
   / Moving Firewood #42  
I like working up the wood pile and don't mind moving it to the pre-burn location. I made a trailer a few years ago that I tow with my Kubota L3000DT. I made the trailer to hold 1/2 cord of wood and made it narrow enough to be able to reach across from one side for ease of loading and unloading.

All my wood is stacked in rows about 20 feet long that I can drive along side. Loading the trailer is easy and quick this way. The wood is then stacked on the back porch which can hold about 2 cords. The stove we use the most is just inside the back door. There is a stove in the cellar, the stairway to the cellar is right in line with the back door 10 feet from the door.

I can remove the treads, they slip into metal stringers. This allows me to just throw the wood down into the cellar where it is piled along a wall right next to where the stairs are. I can put about 1/2 a cord there. I can park the trailer within 15 feet of the cellar stairwell it takes less than 1/2 hour to move the wood from the trailer to the cellar.

As far as mice go we have three cats who have taken care of any mouse who happens to make the mistake of coming in out of the cold.

We have heated our house totally with wood for the past 33 years, in fact we do not have any other form of heat. I really enjoy getting the wood cutting and splitting it and sitting in front of the stove on a cold winter day.

Randy
 
   / Moving Firewood #43  
Here is a picture of about 2 hours and 15 minutes worth of splitting. I forgot to include it in the last post.

Randy
 

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   / Moving Firewood #44  
Youare said:
Here is a picture of about 2 hours and 15 minutes worth of splitting. I forgot to include it in the last post.

Randy

Is that Hand split or machine Split???? :)
 
   / Moving Firewood #45  
I can't imagine using a wheelbaro to transport it. We would go through at least 1 load a day.

Well, the wheel barrow is not a the old style one wheel, wheel barrow. Its one of those rubber maid things with two big wheels. It holds quite a bit of wood if it is stacked the right way. I figured one stacked wheel barrow is about 1/12 to 1/15 of a cord. It usually lasts 2-3 days on a normal cold day if its good firewood. I have some punky wood I'm burning right now that is not so good but thankfully is been warm so we are not using much. No fire for two days.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Moving Firewood #46  
My Uncle converted to Pellets and never looked back... his system is totally automated.

His home is on a down slope. He converted the small storage area under the detached concrete block garage to pellet storage accessed by a small steel door in the garage floor.

Once a year, the pellet truck pulls up to the garage and fills the storage area through the trap door. The pellets are automatically fed to the boiler in the house basement by an underground vacuum system.

The ash is automatically cleaned into a metal waste can by suction also.

It has been two years and no problems...

Does anyone make there own pellets?
 
   / Moving Firewood #48  
dmccarty said:
I palletized my firewood for two seasons. We have a perfect spot on the back porch that has a 6-8 foot roof overhang. We would have to throw a tarp over the wood if it was blowing rain but it worked pretty well....

The problem?

M I C E! :eek::mad:

My wood piles have loads of mice in them. I have found three mice nest so far this year. And we have not burned much wood since its been so warm. We stopped bringing the pallets to the back porch because of the mess and the mice. We had 4-5 mice in the house a year or so ago and they got in because of the palletized wood. What a ^&*() mess they made. No more palletized wood.

The wood piles are on the pallets covered by tarps. I just fill up our big wheel barrow every 3-4 days. It keeps the mess down and no mice. Thankfully the wood is stored uphill from the house. A few years ago it was downhill from the house and I would push the wheelbarrow UPHILL if I did not want to start the tractor. :D Its good excercise! :D:D

I like the idea of the shrink wrapped palletized wood and I think it would be somewhat easy to workout a system to slide it into the basement. But what to do about the danged mice?

Later,
Dan

Rat Zapper 2000, Electronic Trap for Rats, Mice, Rodents
 
   / Moving Firewood #49  
civesnedfield said:
How about something like this. I have seen larger ones just can't find them online right now.

Carry-On 3-Pt. Hitch Hauler, Model# 803 | Category 1 Attachments | Northern Tool + Equipment

It looks like that box sticks out pretty far - on top of the fact that it holds 2500 lbs, seems to me like there would be a lot of leverage by the time you put weight out towards the back section. 2500 lbs on the far rear end would probably make the FRONT end of the tractor a little bit 'dippy'. Right?

Otherwise, I like the look of that design. Price is good, except that shipping bumps up total cost pretty high.

That hauler is definitely big enough to hold my Lazyboy recliner, plus one TV remote control. But at my current body weight, well, that's where the leverage is a problem.
 
   / Moving Firewood #50  
srossman said:
Is that Hand split or machine Split???? :)


I have a SuperSplit wood splitter. 30 percent was stringy birch which I am glad I didn't have to split by hand.

Randy
 

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