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Small Cabin Forum / Off-Grid Living / stacking firewood
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cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 09:28am
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i have been stacking cut firewood in between trees.
guess what?the wind blows the trees and the firewood falls out.
so how do u stack your firewood for winter???

pizzadude
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 09:51am
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Get yourself a wind turbine.
The wind will cease my friend.

hattie
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 10:44am
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I think most people who use wood for heat build a woodshed and store it there. It is also a good way to know if you have enough wood stored. Friends of mine had one and they always said that as long as the woodshed was full before winter, they'd be okay for heat.
Something like this?
Something like this?


creeky
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 10:46am - Edited by: creeky
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pizzadude

cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 11:05am
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thanks creeky...

cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 12:05pm
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been stacking the chopped wood like this but they keep falling out even though i feel i packed them good.
dont like re-work.
kills my back!
ok.one whole stack fell clean out of the trees.all of them..grr.
stacked wood
stacked wood


MJW
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 04:24pm
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I bought a bunch of T posts and laid them out in ricks. As we cut and stack throughout the year, we always know exactly how much we have on hand.
DSCN0714.JPG
DSCN0714.JPG


cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 05:52pm
Reply 


ok thanks so much MJW! that looks really good.Gary O mentioned this way but i did not know how it worked.
yeah.that looks really good.
thanks alot.

turkeyhunter
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 07:09pm
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also find some old barn tin and put on top of your wood stacks and you will always have dry wood in winter.

groingo
Member
# Posted: 8 Jun 2015 11:08pm
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Acouple seasons ago I found the ultimate solution to stacking wood.....I call it PROPANE!

Julie2Oregon
Member
# Posted: 9 Jun 2015 04:50am
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Hahahaha, pizzadude!!! Say it ain't so!

I've seen some fairly inexpensive racks with covers to keep out the elements available. Or is that inviting critters to take up residence?

Kudzu
Member
# Posted: 9 Jun 2015 07:27am
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Do not stack the wood high between the trees, keep it just above waist level and it will not fall.

Malamute
Member
# Posted: 10 Jun 2015 08:00pm
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I use T posts about 12 or 15 feet apart. I use a couple treated 2x2's laid on the ground to keep the wood off the ground. I rip them from cull 2x stuff I get cheaply.

I've stacked some between fence posts (I have power poles for fence posts). It works OK even though the posts are only half the width of the wood stack, but I also turn several pieces of wood lengthways to the stack on the ends of the stack every foot or so going up. Keeps the wood from needing as much help staying in place.

Don_P
Member
# Posted: 11 Jun 2015 08:10am
Reply 


Another way is to stand up pallets on end and drive 2 T posts thru the slots to make an end wall. Lay down a few pallets on the ground, starting at that "bookend". Those get you off the ground and gets some airflow down there. Stand up another bookend pallet at the far end and drive 2 T posts thru those. Flop some scrap tin or a tarp on the top when full and nail or tie it down till winter.

I put in a fossil fuel heater some years ago and at the end of the first season the price had been so low I said I'd never cut firewood again. The price of fuel more than doubled by the next year and has never looked back. I like that unit for backup but I have no mercy on the woodpile if anyone mentions being chilly. Nothing beats nodding off beside something approaching the heat of the sun after a day outside in the winter.

cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 11 Jun 2015 10:17am
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Quoting: Kudzu
Do not stack the wood high between the trees, keep it just above waist level and it will not fall.

Kudzu! this is exactly the solution Gary O told me to do...after i posted this.this is exactly right.thank u...

SE Ohio
Member
# Posted: 12 Jun 2015 10:39am
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My wood storage project. In hindsight, it would have been easy to recycle an old wooden playset (often free locally on craigslist) as a frame for a firewood shed.
wood_storage_xmas_20.jpg
wood_storage_xmas_20.jpg


cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 12 Jun 2015 10:42am
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very nice SE Ohio...very good solution.

MtnDon
Member
# Posted: 12 Jun 2015 01:47pm
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Woodshed with roof and open sides or sides that can be closed / tarped. Depending on climate. Off the ground to discourage bottom rot is it sits a while. Wood oiled between trees like that can also damage the tree bark / tree. Eventually.

moregon
Member
# Posted: 19 Jun 2015 10:49am
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Wood storage
Wood storage


cabingal3
Member
# Posted: 19 Jun 2015 05:05pm
Reply 


thanks so much everyone.u have given me alot of options.thank u.never knew there was so many different ways.

LoonWhisperer
Member
# Posted: 22 Jun 2015 09:26pm
Reply 


Man, i need to get busy. You folks have got some serious inventory

Pookie129
Member
# Posted: 24 Jun 2015 10:32am
Reply 


Quoting: LoonWhisperer
Man, i need to get busy.

Ready to come by and pick up whenever you get finished

Gary O
Member
# Posted: 20 Nov 2015 08:14pm - Edited by: Gary O
Reply 


Update

I thought T posts was 'the' answer, and it is a good one.

However

Ran across this on google

http://www.instructables.com/id/No-tools-firewood-rack/

I think its p-r-e-t-t-y freaking ingenious.

Had a few cinder blocks and scrap wood.

Enough to make two racks...ricks...whatever.
Love the ease of design



Goin' to HD to get 42 more blocks, and some #2 2x4s.
I prefer using the weak side of the 2xs and framing the bottom.

May change back to this guy's design.

Anyway

Firewood w/be high and dry.

toyota_mdt_tech
Member
# Posted: 20 Nov 2015 09:51pm
Reply 


Cabi, when its all done, it should look like this:
serveimage.jpg
serveimage.jpg


pash
Member
# Posted: 21 Nov 2015 12:14am
Reply 


Ive been making round house style like this video a few years, i just eyeball the circle, and mine dont look this pretty, have had 1 or 2 fail, but i also stack on a hill, dries quicker, can put it anywhere, i will never go back to stacking in a line again.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a6PJMH_9ijg

DaveBell
Moderator
# Posted: 21 Nov 2015 11:05am - Edited by: DaveBell
Reply 


This pile never falls over.
WV_OCT_10_072.JPG
WV_OCT_10_072.JPG


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