Dan
I am on a 110 acre lot. In the 33 years of living here, 30 acres have provided me with the average 5 cords a year needed to heat my home from Oct thru April. (1800 sq ft) If you are using 3 times that amount, then you need 90 acres for the same length of time. I drag my stems near my house and process them there. I have limited my travel to under 1/4 mile because I have a 20 hp tractor. I drag the crowns to my "slash" area, cut out the wood I want, pile that onto the tractor and then push the slash to the big slash pile with the fel. I keep the woods clean as a tractor has a much tougher time going over slash than a skidder. You are going to need several "landings" or processing areas with that expanse of gathering area and you are correct for getting out as much wood as you can in one shot. Create the "slash" landing close to the stem landing or at least in an area on the way to the stem landing. A tree that is 16" in diameter measured 4' from the ground will give you about a half of cord of wood harvesting the crown out to 4" diameter logs. A smaller or crowded crown growth will net less of course, A 55-75 hp tractor will skid out 3 of these stems at 25'-30' or about 3/4 cord at a time give or take. As you do not need to split your wood, I do not know if you've put a limit to your diameter for easier handling. If that is the case,you would need 6 10" trees to make a cord. If the trees are dead with no canopy, you'll need more stems by almost double. If you would like, I'll take some pics of my "processing method" if it explains it better. Not counting the crown harvest, I touch my wood only once and that is to split and stack it at the same time. Ok... maybe that's twice. As a former logger, believe me when I tell you the homeowner wood gatherer is having to deal with way more variables than the commercial gatherer namely because the homeowner does not have the same equipment or purpose as the commercial guy. There are still "tricks" the homeowner can use to keep the operation efficient.
Lou