White oak score!

   / White oak score! #11  
Good find and enjoy it while you can. Everyone wants firewood when it’s 10* out. Few want to work for it.
Burn mostly oak. Takes about two years to season bone dry for us. Feels gods this 10* morning.
 
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   / White oak score! #12  
I burn most anything I get but I’m lucky, it's mostly white and red oak along with hickory. I think the white oak burns as good as any but maybe a little less dense.
 
   / White oak score! #13  
That's crazy. I can't get enough of it. We've owned the land we are on for bout 3.5 years and lived on it the last 1.5. I've got wood stacked that will be available fall of 2026. Cutting for 2027 and '28. I'd love to be stocked 3 to 4 years out. I hope the oak drys in 3 summers. Oklahoma is hot, dry amd windy. We will see.

Bummer you can't get rid of it. A tragedy to me 😉
Burnt plenty of it. Split it’s good to go in two yrs.
 
   / White oak score! #14  
I burn most anything I get but I’m lucky, it's mostly white and red oak along with hickory. I think the white oak burns as good as any but maybe a little less dense.
It’s Better than red oak in btu output.
You have 3 prime firewood species there.
 
   / White oak score!
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#15  
Good find and enjoy it while you can. Everyone wants firewood when it’s 10* out. Few want to work for it.
Burn mostly oak. Takes about two years to season bone dry for us. Feels gods this 10* morning.
It sure does. We are grateful for the firewood and our place. We put in a Lopi stove when we built our place. I'm gonna have to work to get wood for fall of 25. Scrounge the dead fall. Hopefully I'm good to go from 2026 on. We built in '22 and into summer '23. So, no wood cutting.
 
   / White oak score! #16  
Various species of Oak around here, and it all goes to the landfill when a hurricane comes through. Such a shame we can't get it trucked up north for people to use for heat.
I got a truckload of oak delivered to my yard by a friend during covid. I cut it all into firewood length and then started splitting it with an maul. That got old, so I rigged up a splitter to go on my tractor. I gave away a couple of rows across my pickup, and only had one person willing to come after it. Everyone else wanted me to "bring them some".
That pile is definitely dry, took some to my Mother saturday, as She was running low.
David from jax
 
   / White oak score! #17  
Good find and enjoy it while you can. Everyone wants firewood when it’s 10* out. Few want to work for it.
Burn mostly oak. Takes about two years to season bone dry for us. Feels gods this 10* morning.
Oak will dry here if cut in early spring, you can burn it the next winter. Longer days, higher temps, etc tend to make it dry. (or maybe I cut and split them smaller?)
I have a good friend in Rutledge, TN who I offered to haul him some, or load his truck up when he was here last month. He buys wood, and still didn't want mine. He burns 24" wood, mine is cut at 16-18" and is too much trouble for him to load into the firebox.
I won't cut them that long, because they don't fit in anybody else's firebox that I know, plus I do it from habit.
I don't have any wood burning stoves here, homeowner's insurance policy is the reason.
I don't have much time to do it, but I actually enjoy cutting and splitting firewood.
David from jax
 
   / White oak score! #18  
Various species of Oak around here, and it all goes to the landfill when a hurricane comes through. Such a shame we can't get it trucked up north for people to use for heat.
I got a truckload of oak delivered to my yard by a friend during covid. I cut it all into firewood length and then started splitting it with an maul. That got old, so I rigged up a splitter to go on my tractor. I gave away a couple of rows across my pickup, and only had one person willing to come after it. Everyone else wanted me to "bring them some".
That pile is definitely dry, took some to my Mother saturday, as She was running low.
David from jax
They’ve made laws around here making it illegal to transport firewood over state lines. Something about a beetle infestation.
Over 30 years ago we’d transport firewood to Cape Cod and get $250 per cord THEN when a cord here would go for a hundred bucks.
Now it’s $250 a cord here so l guess we were ahead of our time.
They love to give environmental reasons around here to cover up ulterior motives.
A couple of our legislators here have oil delivery companies . Couldn’t walk on the beach where the governor had a house because it was deemed a nesting site for some sand plover endangered species bird. Never saw a single plover there.
 
   / White oak score! #19  
I landed a good amount of wood 2 years ago where new utilities were run next to a big woods and they clear cut. I was surprised that most of it was White Oak while some was Cherry, Walnut, Locust, etc. The Oak were all mature trees and the rounds were 2-4 ft diameter. The oak amounted to about 20 pick-up (long box) loads and the other wood was about 6 loads. A person can't turn down an opportunity like that! There is also a problem of borers killing huge oaks in the area.
 
   / White oak score! #20  
They love to give environmental reasons around here to cover up ulterior motives
This is completely incorrect. . We send over 6000 cords of wood per week to various mills and deal with quarantines of various sorts meant to limit the spread of insect and disease on a regular basis. The emerald ash borer is just one insect we are trying to hold at bay for as long as we can.
Firewood is the dirtiest wood product there is, as well as the lowest value.

In your case simply kiln drying the wood is an easy way to get around most quarantines.
 

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