👌TOP 5 Firewood TIPS and MISTAKES to avoid! Cutting, Storage, Processing.

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 75

  • @WoolysWorld
    @WoolysWorld Před 2 lety +2

    Fantastic book

  • @hotpoker4212
    @hotpoker4212 Před 2 lety +1

    Love the videos, get a large truck tyre,remove the inner walls,place on a flat concrete surface, fill with your rounds, and split away, fill your bags from the tyre,🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪

  • @stevepreston7030
    @stevepreston7030 Před 2 lety +2

    "Birch, baby" You must like birch firewood! I am loading a video tomorrow with a free wood score by my house. My tree service neighbor says it's Ponderosa pine and yellow birch. I have not seen yellow birch before. I have burned white birch, but this doesn't look like birch to me. No clue what it is. Take a look at my video tomorrow and let me know your thoughts if this is yellow birch I got.

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +2

      I will watch for sure! Thanks. Birch for us is a great wood but the joke is that it's more rare so more of a score than the ample softwoods haha

  • @the_shelleys
    @the_shelleys Před 3 lety +6

    love it, and we agree, snow gone=firewood time.
    what is your favourite mix of wood to burn fall,winter, spring

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 3 lety +3

      Thanks for the interest. Honestly I'm pretty much sold on the Douglas Fir as a staple but add Pine/Spruce during the warmer spring/fall months and Birch during the colder winter months. Birch is great for keeping that overnight fire!

    • @the_shelleys
      @the_shelleys Před 3 lety +3

      @@rockymountainfirewood3873 we are experimenting with some aspen for shoulder season burning, but we love the birch as well! Half of my shed is spruce this year, but it was on the property so a trade off of conveinence

  • @rockymountainfirewood3873

    Firewood in the Rocky Mountains. Subscribe to stay tuned!
    🪓​czcams.com/channels/IAfgwijDLF2VV_l6fDQtYQ.html 🪓

  • @michaelkearney5562
    @michaelkearney5562 Před rokem

    I've just come across your channel, and i was having a look at your equipment. You have one wedge. Get at least two more and use a sledge hammer to drive them instead of using a maul which is too light for this type of work. Since you do a lot of firewood, there are many occasions where you come across big, thick, knotty rounds/blocks that only open up with the sledge and wedges. Having said that, i suspect that you know this already. By the way, it was an enjoyable and informative video.
    P.S. Yes, Spruce, even though it's a softwood, can be tough stuff to split, mainly because of all the knots.

  • @mattsfirewoodvideos738
    @mattsfirewoodvideos738 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm in southeast Pennsylvania we have ash oak cherry maple alot of hardwood down here I use pine as a starter I hate how some folkes act like burning pine inside is the ultimate sin lol

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      Right? Actually lodgepole pine around here is great because most of the trees are dead standing beetle kill and get a good 17MBTU per cord or so. Nothing to brag about but does the trick. Thanks Matt stay tuned.

  • @quinntheeskimooutdoors6234
    @quinntheeskimooutdoors6234 Před 11 měsíci

    😊Thanks for sharing 😊. Take care

  • @OntarioFirewoodResource
    @OntarioFirewoodResource Před 2 lety +2

    Good points covering from forest to stove

  • @ljd8520
    @ljd8520 Před 2 lety +2

    Great video, Greetings from Salisbury, England

  • @botfoblhrp
    @botfoblhrp Před 2 lety +1

    i have pen im using 2 years seasoning, next pen will be 4 years , got 110 foot row 3 rows deep still in rounds seasoning right now 😁. oh im in kansas so we dont burn conifers, just hardwoods. birch here would be starter.

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      Firewood envy! Thanks for sharing. More firewood videos to come once the snow melts so subscribe.

  • @martinschulz9381
    @martinschulz9381 Před 2 lety +2

    Good video. I constantly hear a lot of complicated hokem methods from the old timers...most of which involve needless complication, and more work. Firewood is very simple (No science) The most important thing is giving it plenty time to dry. Stack it in loose rows in a woodshed and just let it dry. Manage your woodshed so you are always burning the oldest wood. If you can't build a decent woodshed have a carpenter build one; it's not that expensive. What kind wood I burn just happens to be which trees fall down and are available to me.
    If you use fire starter sticks to start fires in the stove, for very little cost, they will save you a lot of time, mess and work. Once you start using them , you'll never go back to kindling.
    If you want to see the big difference between green and dried wood, try building a campfire with green wood. Difficult to start and get heat out of.

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      Great points, Martin. I agree. The hokem gimicks drive me nuts! The campfire analogy is spot on. I'm hoping to do a "things you didn't know about firewood" if you have any fun facts? Cheers.

  • @gumboot65
    @gumboot65 Před 2 lety +3

    Good vid for the beginners. And some good info for the experienced people.
    Aspen, poplar, cottonwood burn Great after seasoning. Or if it's standing dead.
    It sure beats burnin snowballs !

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      Rock and roll thanks for the tip! I'll give it a test try.. maybe include in upcoming videos as soon as the snow will melt hopefully soon.

  • @kennethverkest6717
    @kennethverkest6717 Před 2 lety +1

    In Ohio I prefer to burn locusts and Osage orange Red oak Beach and white oak and hard maple I try to stay away for SAP wood as much as possible Aspen Burns pretty good dry just burns fast

  • @georgereidler3130
    @georgereidler3130 Před 11 měsíci

    Norwegian wood Awesome book
    Lots of information!.Being hear in ne pennsylvania
    Have a lot of mixed Hardwoods to choose from
    Take care videos are awesome Thankyou

  • @troopygino
    @troopygino Před 2 lety +1

    Birch baby!

  • @yabwee2
    @yabwee2 Před rokem +2

    I perceive a Canadian.

  • @davefield81
    @davefield81 Před 2 lety +2

    More videos please. It's almost firewood season!

  • @Dashr44
    @Dashr44 Před 2 lety +2

    Your example, "axe/maul", are you saying that they are the same tool? If so, they aren't. A maul isn't used for chopping, like the axe is made for. It's used for splitting wood.
    Also, Osage orange is the type that burns the hottest.

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for the note - you are right! I was more speaking generally for an axe or maul. I personally call them my splitting maul for all splitting wood except kindling. I use a short handle axe for kindling and falling trees.

  • @davefield81
    @davefield81 Před 3 lety +5

    Great video. Please talk about length and size to split in the next video. Thanks!

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 3 lety +2

      Noted!

    • @WoolysWorld
      @WoolysWorld Před 2 lety +2

      Depends on the size of you fire

    • @DerekBlais
      @DerekBlais Před rokem

      Depends on the size of stove and who's handling the wood. I buck to 30 cm if it's elderly or less burly people handling the wood. It's lighter and more manageable for them. As for size to split, it's best to vary it. Larger pieces take longer to dry but if properly dried, they'll burn longer and are ideal for overnight.

    • @user-qu7jc8ht5q
      @user-qu7jc8ht5q Před rokem

      If your selling per cord cut at 16 inches or your splitting an extra 4x8 row per cord. Otherwise 12 to 16 fits most stoves

  • @zeromark202
    @zeromark202 Před 2 lety +1

    Good Info Video

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you. Any room for improvement or things you would like to hear more about on upcoming videos?

  • @davidmatznick778
    @davidmatznick778 Před 2 lety +2

    Using pine wood most of the time now often do you have to clean your chimney ?

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +2

      Good question. I actually burn mostly Douglas Fir, but maybe 1/5 Lodgepole pine which I find not too sappy. Typically once per year I'll clean the chimney but I've been doing it twice recently since I've got a new stove. Just making sure everything is good! Cheers.

  • @chaseallin1917
    @chaseallin1917 Před rokem

    Hahaha man. It's crazy how different our areas are. If I tried to sell anything softwood for firewood it would not go over great. It's all about the oak, maple, ash, and cherry around here. From Southern Ontario, cheers and happy burning.

  • @scottthornandhisbeesandtrees

    Nice video! Appreciate the tips and the production was very good. Thanks for sharing.

  • @rayban5737
    @rayban5737 Před 2 lety +1

    A good tip if you have time is once seasoned for one Year is to soak about 5 cord in petrol then reseason for 1year costly but the wood burns well

  • @Theferg1
    @Theferg1 Před rokem

    Great video and info. Sir, what about Bradford pear trees? I’m cutting one down in my front yard and wanting to know if it will be good firewood? Thanks

  • @fusionreaper
    @fusionreaper Před 2 lety +1

    Great video man

  • @lovestihlquality1369
    @lovestihlquality1369 Před rokem

    I always bring extra chains. Easier for me to sharpen after dark. Main problem with dull chains is murder on your saw.

  • @sawahfwaps144
    @sawahfwaps144 Před 2 lety +4

    No one seems to mention how long after falling a tree and cutting to length should it be split.

    • @davefield81
      @davefield81 Před 2 lety +4

      Good point! I go for splitting right away. Sooner split, sooner it dries. It also seems to split easier the sooner it's split.

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +3

      Thanks for this question. It all depends when you're planning on burning the wood. The quicker the wood is bucked/split/cut, the quicker it will dry because more surface area is exposed. I personally prefer to buck and split right away. The wood types I have seem to split easier when wet, plus there's less splinters.

    • @livingadamman7994
      @livingadamman7994 Před 2 lety +1

      If it's been standing dead 2-3 years split right away or wait a season, at least that's a basic guide. Species and location and how dry the seasons are when drying all factor in as do many other things.

    • @DerekBlais
      @DerekBlais Před rokem

      The sooner you split and stack, the sooner it starts drying.

  • @Hi-levels
    @Hi-levels Před 2 lety +1

    My stove came without gasket for front glass

  • @yannst-pierre9541
    @yannst-pierre9541 Před 2 lety +2

    Nice video,,,, but we don’t even burn that kind of wood here,,, it’s junk wood for us, Not worth the work to cut and split

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety

      Must be nice haha. What kind of wood do you have? Best wood that grows around here for us is birch.

    • @yannst-pierre9541
      @yannst-pierre9541 Před 2 lety

      @@rockymountainfirewood3873 we burn maple,,,,, sugar maple

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      @@yannst-pierre9541 nice. Looks like my yellow birch isn't too far behind for heating value! www.cdlinc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/btu-per-tree-type-5.pdf

  • @sunshineacres
    @sunshineacres Před rokem

    Good info. Like this video. Will check you your channel.

  • @guly
    @guly Před 2 lety +1

    So im Norwegian and thats pretty much what gets burned around here, and has been for thousands of years. The climate dictates which trees that grow, and 90 % of all Norwegian woods are Spruce, pine and birch... For people who call that trash, u might be right.. Then again whats ur idea, should we freeze to death during the winters because pine burns faster than hard woods ?🙃 Haha, every wood will burn, season it properly, have ur chimney cleaned+ clean it ur self yearly to know whats going on - and just enjoy warm homes during winters.. Firewood warms u up 3 times, when u fall the tree and split the wood - when you stack it up - and finally when u burn it. Its something beautiful thats in our DNA and i love that it will probably be a part of our lives for many generations.

    • @patrickmeyer9419
      @patrickmeyer9419 Před 2 lety +1

      Right on....you burn what grows around you. I'm fortunate to live where hardwood is abundant but if it wasn't I certainly am not going to freeze. Cheers to you!

    • @patrickmeyer9419
      @patrickmeyer9419 Před 2 lety +1

      Uh...burning 15-20 years and you just figured seasoning is important? Maybe those softwood burn easier wet but opening up my burner and hearing sizzling and crappy fire would've been a hint to

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      @@patrickmeyer9419 haha well I should say I just now figured out HOW important seasoning is. The tradition growing up was always fall firewood but now that fall firewood is for the following winter unless she's bone dry.

  • @adnan9520
    @adnan9520 Před 2 lety +2

    Pine seriously?

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +2

      I take it you don't thing pine is good? :)

    • @adnan9520
      @adnan9520 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rockymountainfirewood3873 well too much sap, burns
      Quicker and less hotter than hardwoods and clogs the chimney with soot

    • @rockymountainfirewood3873
      @rockymountainfirewood3873  Před 2 lety +1

      @@adnan9520 Interesting. I wonder if there is a difference in what we're talking. The pine family of trees apparently includes a ton of interesting firewoods. The only "pine" I refer to is Lodgepole which actually has pretty good firewood qualities for a softwood. I just did a little googling and apparently Douglas Fir is a member of the pine family which is one of the best. No comparison to a hardwood but competes for sure.

    • @adnan9520
      @adnan9520 Před 2 lety

      @@rockymountainfirewood3873 ok good to know, learned something new thank you

  • @mikeh1808
    @mikeh1808 Před 2 lety +2

    Sound effects, clicking, we could do without. Boom!

  • @danthedewman1
    @danthedewman1 Před 9 měsíci

    The best trick to seasoning firewood is get 3 years ahead