Firewood?

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I'm far from any type of woodsman, but some years back I burnt out the motor on my Husquavarna felling an oak on my property. The oak was about 2.5" in dia at the base. Chain was still sharp but the wood was very tough. The chainsaw was also fairly new so I though that I would get it replaced under warranty. They said no, and now I have a Stihl and have never had a problem with it. We burn about about 8-10 cords a year, but used to burn around 18.
 
Not much for hardwood here, occasional paper birch is about it. We burn a mix of larch, doug fir and pine. keeps the place warm all winter. the old 026 works just fine, but thinking I need to spare the 40 and get a pickup
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Not much for hardwood here, occasional paper birch is about it. We burn a mix of larch, doug fir and pine. keeps the place warm all winter. the old 026 works just fine, but thinking I need to spare the 40 and get a pickup
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Lol, great pic packing the 40. I used to do that, but got tired of all the scorpions crawling around.:doh:
 
Yea wood is a lifestyle and you gotta enjoy it. I split by hand on occasions but have a huskee 35 ton splitter. I like em big and square.

That's funny because I like the rounded triangle better. A good 12" long cut into 1/4's make for easy stacking. I do admire that pile, looks like a lot of work.
 
For me, the bigger, the better. If I can pick up the piece and throw it in the furnace, that's how it stays. Having an outside furnace has saved me untold time and work. I do split wood for the living room fire place.
 
I wish I could do that to the tree in my backyard! I'm very fortunate to live in CA where I rarely have to use our fireplace, but I do love to see a good fire going during winter, I guess it's our inner caveman haha.
 
Where in central CA are you? I spent a winter in Los Molinos, working for the Nature Conservancy, on the Dye Creek Preserve. In a random twist, years later, the FJ-40 I ended up buying came from Red Bluff, all the way to MA.
 
lol, 8 cords per branch.. I'm used to 3 logs per tree :D
 
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