Never again

   / Never again #51  
Been feeding wood 🪵 stoves for over 5 decades.

I love the big rounds and the yields they produce.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_3583.jpeg
    IMG_3583.jpeg
    4.9 MB · Views: 29
   / Never again #52  
Been cutting wood for 60 years.
I tried something new today.
Had a load of stems delivered and the driver asked if he could bring me a 40” wide stem, 15’ long and tapering to 32”. I said “sure” since I got this new Champion vert/*** splitter.
So I take to it with my 20” bar and my tried and true Husky 257 and 3 cuts into this thing and I’m out of fuel. Now I have these 3 cookies averaging 36” wide and 16” long and they weigh at least 250 lbs per.
I try to stand them on end so I can roll them to the splitter and have to use a 4’ peavy to get them up.
I get them to the splitter and push them up the splitter foot w the tractor.
The 27 ton splitter easily splits this wood but to wrangle the splits is back breaking.
4 hrs later including bringing these splits to the woodshed to be stacked, I got the stem half done.
Yes it produces a lot of wood but it’s way too much work so, I won’t be doing that again.
You should have quartered them with your chainsaw to make them much more manageable to move around. It saves your back from a lot of undo stress.
 
   / Never again #53  
Been cutting wood for 60 years.
I tried something new today.
Had a load of stems delivered and the driver asked if he could bring me a 40” wide stem, 15’ long and tapering to 32”. I said “sure” since I got this new Champion vert/*** splitter.
So I take to it with my 20” bar and my tried and true Husky 257 and 3 cuts into this thing and I’m out of fuel. Now I have these 3 cookies averaging 36” wide and 16” long and they weigh at least 250 lbs per.
I try to stand them on end so I can roll them to the splitter and have to use a 4’ peavy to get them up.
I get them to the splitter and push them up the splitter foot w the tractor.
The 27 ton splitter easily splits this wood but to wrangle the splits is back breaking.
4 hrs later including bringing these splits to the woodshed to be stacked, I got the stem half done.
Yes it produces a lot of wood but it’s way too much work so, I won’t be doing that again.
I use my bucket to gently set the big stuff on the splinter. Either vert or ***. I am to old to pick up that much. Work smarter not dumber
 
   / Never again #55  
Been cutting wood for 60 years.
I tried something new today.
Had a load of stems delivered and the driver asked if he could bring me a 40” wide stem, 15’ long and tapering to 32”. I said “sure” since I got this new Champion vert/*** splitter.
So I take to it with my 20” bar and my tried and true Husky 257 and 3 cuts into this thing and I’m out of fuel. Now I have these 3 cookies averaging 36” wide and 16” long and they weigh at least 250 lbs per.
I try to stand them on end so I can roll them to the splitter and have to use a 4’ peavy to get them up.
I get them to the splitter and push them up the splitter foot w the tractor.
The 27 ton splitter easily splits this wood but to wrangle the splits is back breaking.
4 hrs later including bringing these splits to the woodshed to be stacked, I got the stem half done.
Yes it produces a lot of wood but it’s way too much work so, I won’t be doing that again.
This is exactly why I usually cut smaller trees that are manageable. Any trunks that size should probably go to the mill if there is one close enough. I have some old oaks that are more than 4 or 5' across. I would not try to cut those on my own with the equipment I have. I learned the hard way when I was cutting firewood to sell as a teen that I didn't want to deal with the bigger logs.
 
   / Never again #59  
Mama said "Your eyes are bigger than your stomach," and while you ain't eatin' logs . . .

Geeze she was smart as a whip - and never logged a tree in her 91 years.
 
   / Never again #60  
Cutting with the grain. Saw will spit out long streams of linguini-like "noodles". It's an extremely fast way to halve or quarter a round, many times faster than traditional rip cutting.
Thank you - I've done it! But just called it ripping. And on much smaller 'stems' (that I've always called logs - but I get the logic).

We've heated with our own logs for twenty some years now and I still don't know what what I've been doing's called! ;)

Imagine that!
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

Pair of New 700/40-225 Alliance Tires with Rims (A55301)
Pair of New...
2012 Ford F-550 4x4 Flatbed Truck (A55788)
2012 Ford F-550...
2015 Toyota Prius (A55758)
2015 Toyota Prius...
(2) CAM2 HI TEMP LITHIUM COMPLEX GREASE DRUMS (A54757)
(2) CAM2 HI TEMP...
14ft. Deer Gate (A53424)
14ft. Deer Gate...
JLG SCISSORLIFT (A52705)
JLG SCISSORLIFT...
 
Top