Never again

   / Never again #51  
Been feeding wood 🪵 stoves for over 5 decades.

I love the big rounds and the yields they produce.
 

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   / Never again #52  
Been cutting wood for 60 years.
I tried something new today.
Had a load of stems delivered and the driver asked if he could bring me a 40” wide stem, 15’ long and tapering to 32”. I said “sure” since I got this new Champion vert/*** splitter.
So I take to it with my 20” bar and my tried and true Husky 257 and 3 cuts into this thing and I’m out of fuel. Now I have these 3 cookies averaging 36” wide and 16” long and they weigh at least 250 lbs per.
I try to stand them on end so I can roll them to the splitter and have to use a 4’ peavy to get them up.
I get them to the splitter and push them up the splitter foot w the tractor.
The 27 ton splitter easily splits this wood but to wrangle the splits is back breaking.
4 hrs later including bringing these splits to the woodshed to be stacked, I got the stem half done.
Yes it produces a lot of wood but it’s way too much work so, I won’t be doing that again.
You should have quartered them with your chainsaw to make them much more manageable to move around. It saves your back from a lot of undo stress.
 
   / Never again #53  
Been cutting wood for 60 years.
I tried something new today.
Had a load of stems delivered and the driver asked if he could bring me a 40” wide stem, 15’ long and tapering to 32”. I said “sure” since I got this new Champion vert/*** splitter.
So I take to it with my 20” bar and my tried and true Husky 257 and 3 cuts into this thing and I’m out of fuel. Now I have these 3 cookies averaging 36” wide and 16” long and they weigh at least 250 lbs per.
I try to stand them on end so I can roll them to the splitter and have to use a 4’ peavy to get them up.
I get them to the splitter and push them up the splitter foot w the tractor.
The 27 ton splitter easily splits this wood but to wrangle the splits is back breaking.
4 hrs later including bringing these splits to the woodshed to be stacked, I got the stem half done.
Yes it produces a lot of wood but it’s way too much work so, I won’t be doing that again.
I use my bucket to gently set the big stuff on the splinter. Either vert or ***. I am to old to pick up that much. Work smarter not dumber
 
   / Never again #55  
Been cutting wood for 60 years.
I tried something new today.
Had a load of stems delivered and the driver asked if he could bring me a 40” wide stem, 15’ long and tapering to 32”. I said “sure” since I got this new Champion vert/*** splitter.
So I take to it with my 20” bar and my tried and true Husky 257 and 3 cuts into this thing and I’m out of fuel. Now I have these 3 cookies averaging 36” wide and 16” long and they weigh at least 250 lbs per.
I try to stand them on end so I can roll them to the splitter and have to use a 4’ peavy to get them up.
I get them to the splitter and push them up the splitter foot w the tractor.
The 27 ton splitter easily splits this wood but to wrangle the splits is back breaking.
4 hrs later including bringing these splits to the woodshed to be stacked, I got the stem half done.
Yes it produces a lot of wood but it’s way too much work so, I won’t be doing that again.
This is exactly why I usually cut smaller trees that are manageable. Any trunks that size should probably go to the mill if there is one close enough. I have some old oaks that are more than 4 or 5' across. I would not try to cut those on my own with the equipment I have. I learned the hard way when I was cutting firewood to sell as a teen that I didn't want to deal with the bigger logs.
 
   / Never again #59  
Mama said "Your eyes are bigger than your stomach," and while you ain't eatin' logs . . .

Geeze she was smart as a whip - and never logged a tree in her 91 years.
 
   / Never again #60  
Cutting with the grain. Saw will spit out long streams of linguini-like "noodles". It's an extremely fast way to halve or quarter a round, many times faster than traditional rip cutting.
Thank you - I've done it! But just called it ripping. And on much smaller 'stems' (that I've always called logs - but I get the logic).

We've heated with our own logs for twenty some years now and I still don't know what what I've been doing's called! ;)

Imagine that!
 

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