GSVette I've never really figured out a use for all the chips I generate. One year - quite a while back - I tried using them, like gravel, in certain spots on the driveway. They looked nice, they "drove nice" - but unfortunately they were not heavy enough to stay in place and they ended up on the side of the driveway with the plowed snow. And its a pretty long trip from where I generate the chips out to the driveway - so after that one time I've not used them for that purpose again.
However - If you had enough chips and had the patience - my problem - to wait for the driveway and pine chips to freeze up, rock hard, before you do any snow plowing - - pine chips DO make a really nice driveway cover material. Soft, quiet, no dust and locally available - providing you have stuff to continue to chip.
Otherwise - I've got piles of pine chips moldering away in many spots - all over the central portion of my property. In total probably half a dozen or more pickup loads.
My main reason to chip is to get rid of all the small pines I cut when thinning all my pine stands - soooo... I've really never given much thought to using the chips.
They do make good ground cover and are OK for mulch. I think you have to add something to the mix if you are going to use them for mulch - I read somewhere but don't remember what it was.
Ah - I HAVE used them - - I hauled some to a spot where the exposed bedrock and Mt St Helens ash cause an "ash cloud" when we get our winds out of the SW. I'm out here in the scab rock lands about twelve miles due SW of Cheney - near the old town of Amber and Rock Lk. Lots of volcanic ash still hanging around - not yet covered by soil yet.
I don't know where you are relative to a purchase of a
chipper - send me a pm if you would like to come out and see a Wallenstein BX62S in action.
This HOT WX - hit 105F yesterday @ 3:30pm - has got to break, sooner or later. Oosik