Wood Processing for burning..

   / Wood Processing for burning.. #1  

hr3

Veteran Member
Joined
Oct 18, 2008
Messages
1,135
Location
Mid. Coast Maine
Tractor
7610 hst
Looking for input on how" You All" process there own fire wood for the season.. I guess I'm looking for ideas for making it easyer..

This is how I do it.. Cut the trees.. mostly clear cutting right now.. soon i will be thining out.. So anyway I just drop about 5 to 6 cords any witch way,,, and limb them up.. I hook the tree and the wiffy pulls them out,,"with the tractor".. I'll limb another by the time she gets back then the hook again.. After they are all pulled out and stacked I'll push the brush into a pile.."We wait till the winter to burn it"... After the pile is done I'll start cutting off the pile and the wife will start splitting the smaller stuff.. We stack the wood on 1/4 cord pallets and use the tractor to stack them in a windrow on the edje of the field... In the fall we will bring them over to the house on the pallets and just dump them into the basement... I can fit a cord at a time in the bulkhead,,, the wife stacks it during the day and I'll drop another cord the next night or so,,,

This year we are running behind..Only 2 cords in the windrow,, rains this spring then the hot summer,,So We are back at it now that it has cooled...
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #2  
Ideally it would be nice to be one season ahead of yourself, that way your burning dry wood and hopefully the wife has a wood splitter to make it easier.
Other then having some type of a wood processor, which would be quite expensive, it sounds like your doing it about the only other way I can think of.
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #3  
Ideally it would be nice to be one season ahead of yourself, that way your burning dry wood and hopefully the wife has a wood splitter to make it easier.
Other then having some type of a wood processor, which would be quite expensive, it sounds like your doing it about the only other way I can think of.

and dry wood is so much LIGHTER than green - now THAT makes the job easier, the final phases anyway.
Makes less mess in the chimney too.
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #4  
A season ahead would be better. Dry wood in addition to being lighter to handle, burns cleaner... When I used to do this(switched to a pellet stove 3 years ago) my goal was always at least one season ahead, or at the very least, processing at the end of winter for next winter's wood.

The less I have to move it, the happier I am(was). It is of course easier to move in one piece with the tractor. I used to make one long windrow pile that could be covered loosley with 2 long rectangular tarps. The two tarps are placed along the sides of the long pile and loosley tied together at the top of hte pile to allow airflow up thru the gap but keep most of the percipitation off. the bottem edges are left loose to allow airflo to enter under the pile and dry the wood.

I would drag the log alongside this pile area and limb and cut it there. Then the pieces get stood up right where they were laying and split at least once and thrown onto the pile right alongside where the log was drug. Up to about 6" in diameter, this was a one swing per piece affair. Any larger might be more than one swing and or a wedge. After the wood was removed, the limbs got drug-raked to the end into a pile and the next log brought in. I never used a log splitter till my last year or two, and it does typically take more time, at least for me it did. A log splitter does split on the first pass, but is slower, and requires that you again move the wood to the splitter, position it properly on the splitter and then move the split pieces onto the pile. This extra moving always seemed like more work to me than the way I had done it for years.

I thought a splitter on a front end loader with the cylinder/rail hanging down below the bucket and offset to the side miight be nice. Never had the luxury of a tractor till a few years ago or I am sure I would have developed this for my older years:). This way I could cut the drug up log into pieces, and the only change from the way I have done it would be to rotate it 90 degrees on the ground instead of standing it upright. You would then drive along the line of wood pieces with the tractor and position the splitter in turn over each cut piece of wood and split it right where it lays from the tractor seat. A 4 way splitter head could probably be made to work well as you could lift the piece of wood off the ground once started, to facilitate a clean 4 way split...
 
   / Wood Processing for burning..
  • Thread Starter
#5  
The wood is pleanty dry as long as we get it cut and split in the early spring late winter.. I drop the trees while there is still snow on the ground that way I don't tear up the ground too much hauling them out,,hmmm don't know why that matters I dig the stumps shortly after... and yes we have a splitter..:D I do think that this fall "late" I will drop next years wood though.. To save trying to get at the trees with 2' of snow around them.

Been thinking of going to a "bio log",, but then that wouldn't be free,,so to speak,,
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #6  
I cut my wood to length in the woods and haul it with either a trailer behind the tractor or the Kubota RTV. Dump it next to the wood shed until it gets split and stacked in the shed.

During winter, I load a small utility cart and pull it into the garage with the 4 wheeler. We take the wood directly from the cart to the stove.

I should have enough left over from last winter for this winter. Plus I have another 3-4 cord waiting to be split. I too get behind with the wet year we have had this year. My plan was to get 3 years split and stacked in the shed. :)
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #7  
I hang the splitter on the side of the 3 pt carry all, chainsaw, fuel and oil in the FEL and idle off into the bush. Last year and this I have been blocking up and splitting trees that the wind took down in a big storm last summer. I cut a bunch of blocks, split them onto the carry all, when it is full I drive back up behind the shop and pile the wood. I find that way I don't play myself out going too hard at chainsawing or muscling blocks onto the splitter, the drive back and forth to the wood pile gives me a little break. I can keep a pretty steady pace all day, surprising how much wood that can be.
Should be a photo attached showing the carry all on the B7610. Since then I have extended and strengthened the carryall and made a better mount for the splitter. In this photo I was trying the splitter out with it just C clamped in place.
 

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   / Wood Processing for burning.. #8  
Rod,

that looks like an interesting approach. You must have flat land to get around in the snow with turf tires.

I had a carryall, but it didn't hold up. But then I guess it wasn't made for carrying a heavy load of rocks :( But I do like your set up and approach to work.

We don't get much snow here but we do get a lot of mud. Even on gentle slopes in winter I've gotten equipment stuck, even with ag tires. I had one utility trailer loaded with wood that I couldn't get up a gentle slope. I unloaded it and it stayed there until spring....by which time it had two flat tires :mad: Our winter mud here is like grease.

Ken
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #9  
Drop cut up load drive to wood shed spilt and stack. If anything is to big to load then save and spilt where it was dropped. The idea to cutting/using wood for heat is to handle it as little as possible. Of course for all of us folks that have been doing this for years and years and years and.... we all know that wood heat makes ya warm/hot twice. Once while you're working with it and again in the fire/woodstove.
 
   / Wood Processing for burning.. #10  
I do it differently. I want to remove the tree to clear the woods while also getting firewood. Don't want a mess out of my woods so I fall the tree and then drag it with the limbs still attached to the limbing area. If the tree is too long I cut off the lowest section and drag it to the limbing area. Once there I get of the tractor and limb the tree. Then back on the tractor and drag the log to the log stack. Unhitch the tree and then go back to the limbing area and shove all the limbs into the limb pile which is quite large and is right next to the limbing area. Round and round I go until a sizable stack of logs has been accumulated.

I should mention that my woodlot/property is 50 miles from home.

I return to the woodlot with only a truck and trailer and fill the truck and trailer with about 2.5 cords of rounds. Drag the trailer home and dump near woodstack area. Split the wood into a pile and then stack, stacking is the least fun part.

Today I have 13.5 cords stacked on pallets plus another 4 cord heap that I plan to sell since the 13.5 cords represents three full seasons of burning.
 

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