stuckmotor
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2009
- Messages
- 7,634
- Location
- Lower Up State S.C.
- Tractor
- AC WD 34 hp/3500 lbs MF 261 60 hp/5380 lbs
Not really. Wood laying on the ground will eventually get some rot where it contacts the ground in a couple of years. I had some left over rebar from my house build laying on the ground for 4 or 5 years before it developed some surface rust.
Now weeds come up every spring no matter how dry the winter was. I guess a couple of millions of years of evolution taught them how.
Thanks. I asked a similar question of someone who had visited Dick Proenneke's cabin in Alaska. It was difficult for me to believe he could lay the bottom logs on the ground and expect the cabin to last.