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#firewood

2 posts2 participants0 posts today

Some of the concrete beams got a new job. Keeping firewood off the ground and well ventilated.

This firewood store is superb, wind blows through it from one direction or the other most of the time. The stacks were aligned the wrong way though and leaning against the barn, plus the wood had just been stacked on the ground, so the bottom layers were rotted away and the next few were moist.

All fixed now! Plus some stacking done.

There's even tasty grapes on the roof.

Fixed up the roof supports of the firewood store. The old were sitting on soil and rotting away.

Jacked up the roof beam, cut out the rotten old support and pulled it out. Filled the hole with smashed up concrete debris and drilled a hole through a large chunk, hammered a piece of rebar through and left it sticking out to fit into a hole I drilled into the new log. No more rotting.

Then new supports cut, shaped and installed x3.

Took advantage of a second day of nice weather to go snag some free firewood!

These are all sections of trunk that were attached to root balls. The trees were mostly felled by high winds, and my partner already broke up the bulk of each tree (slash to the forestry yard, trunks broken up into nice even sections, dried for a bit, then split). But we still got almost another 1000lbs of wood today. And we're doing a bit to help prevent fires in the area too!

Thanks to Trade Frames Direct of Bishop Auckland who always have a lot of waste wood that they don't want to put into a skip. It's about 50/50 hardwood and softwood.

Most of these windows were still glazed so I had a smashing time yesterday.

Picked up the rest of the two fallen birches from the bottom of the road. The parts not frozen to the ground anyways.

Lots more fallen and hanging trees to clean up.

The pile grows!

Been looking at a PTO shredder for the tractor to process the piles of branches I've been leaving everywhere. Good stuff when mulched. Less so when piled up in the forest. Burning is dumb.

There's a nice one from Poland:

litechnija.lt/en/wood-chippers

Need a sponsor 😛

One of the reasons I’ve been postponing migrating servers is that I’ve been busy on too many different things. Like preparing my garden for spring coming up and clean up the mess the wind did during the snow.

First picture was in January. The others are 2 days ago. I’m not sure the new tree will actually live because it was attached to the plum tree that fell and so was damaged a bit too. This work was spread over a few days, mainly keeping me busy the last 2 weekends.

I decided to make a longer #video ca 10 mins (editing is..fun..lol) Cutting #firewood in the #bush on a couple of recent #cold days
I make noise with tarps, crunch around on snow, use a chainsaw + wood splitting maul (big heavy axe- don't call it an axe..lol). Lots of ASMR some plain old noise + jibber jabber as I talk + pretty #forest views of frost crystals falling
Spectra to follow
youtu.be/NiryPEQvdEI
#Alberta #Canada #CountryLiving #BorealForest #Getoutside #frostodon #PolarVortex

Picked up those two fallen birches from the bottom of the road (see previous photo).

No problems getting up the hill despite all the snow this time.

The small trailer is filled up pretty quick, this is just from two skinny birches and I didn't even get even get everything as there's another tree across that I need to pull off.

But I think trying the big trailer might be tempting fate.

Paying the heating bill.

Set up a nice firewood station now. The three-limbed stump makes a good log sawing stand.

Also rolled the old chopping block over there, shortened it a bit (it was too tall even for a tall person) and split the logs I collected from clearing the road.

The apple logs were in full sap (result of overly warm January) and frozen hard - the axe just bounced off. They'll have to thaw first.

Could use a slightly heavier axe.

Finished processing that apple tree. Some nice fruit wood for making shashlikh, another length of log for sawmilling and another stupid pile of branches to be turned into useful mulch later.

Some knotty parts were hard to split and tried to steal my axe, so I cut the burr off this old (but very useful) steel wedge and rescued my axe with it.

Grinder ran out of battery, so no smooth finish.

After the test run, first mission: pick up windfall from the road down to the river.

This is why I serviced the already overhauled tractor first - I really wanted to be sure the brakes work. Had to stop on that hill repeatedly to pick up piles of logs.

Great success, not only did everything fit in the trailer, the Iseki pulled it back up the steep and snowy path with ease.

A lot easier than by wheelbarrow! 😅

Bonus: A nice sunset.