In my post-arrival talk with The Cowboy, we always chat about things that have gone on since my last visit: how the garden is going, how the cattle are doing, any repairs or improvements underway, anything that has gone wrong. During our discussion this month, he mentioned a friend of his was dropping brush by to put on the burn pile for next burn season (I mentioned I had seen the trailer). He also mentioned the same friend had a load of firewood he did not need. The Cowboy did not need it either, but had the thought to just drop it off in front of our woodshed. Would I be interested in it?
Free firewood? Of course I am.
Here is the pile:
It was an odd mix of pine, oak, cedar, and even some other woods I could not identify. The length of the logs was highly variable, which makes me suspect it was a combination of multiple exercises in wood cutting, perhaps even some clearing after our Winter storms.
The woodshed when I started:
Stacking firewood is a rather pleasant task. It keeps the hands busy at a level that allows thought and engages the mind at a low enough level that one can do the work and think or ponder on other issues - quite unlike the work I do now, which has no physical involvement and completely consumes the mind.
Stacking after Day one:
As I was in no hurry, the activity took me about an hour a day after work. My work pace was steady - after all, I just had to be done by the end of the week. The work was in the shade of oak and pine trees, so it made it a pleasantly temperate task as well.
Stacking after Day two:
By my count, this is a bit above a cord of wood - and at the current rate I am here and how much I burn, will last me quite a while.
Out of curiosity, I checked in the local area here for pricing. Prices ran anywhere from $700 for three cords of unsplit wood to $150 for a sixth of a cord split. I have no idea what the actual value of this is and it probably fluctuates depending on where one is: given the Winter we had this last year, I suspect our local area is awash in wood, not so much in the more urban parts. No matter what it is running, it was - to us - free. All it cost us was about three hours of work.
Reason #343 why The Ranch is a magical place: up here, things like this still happen.
Quite the windfall there TB, you're fortunate to have such good folks think of you.
ReplyDeleteIt and I am, Nylon12. And given how often I am currently there, this wood will last a long time.
DeleteThat is indeed very lucky deal to fall into. Pre-cut firewood, ready for the fireplace / wood stove. Your friend is a good one !
ReplyDeleteI had some work pushed on me Saturday morning. A mesquite branch had broken on our backyard tree. About and hour and a half with the electric pole saw. Where it broke as approximately 8" thick, which had luckily broken off enough where I could lever and twist it off without climbing a ladder. I'm scared of heights, especially when falling limbs can knock over the ladder. About 2/3 was set in alley for hauling off, the thicker cut and kept for our backyard bar-b-ques, which are infrequent at best. Maybe 5 -6 a year.
He is a good friend.
DeleteI am not a fan of ladders either, especially involving things falling off. Glad everything went okay - and you got some wood out of it!
What a wonderful gift. Large pieces all split, perfect for burning! I can imagine your satisfaction seeing it stacked up neatly. :)
ReplyDeleteIt is a wonderful gift Becki - and yes, having it organized was all the more satisfying.
DeleteFor us, wood prices fluctuate pretty dramatically. For a time after the Emerald Ash Borer went through and killed thousands of ash trees, you couldn’t give it away. Before that maybe $150 a half cord split and delivered.I burn a tiny fraction of a cord a year so your pile would last me more than a decade. In fact my pile is so seasoned now it burns really quickly.
ReplyDeleteEd, it has been years since I looked at the price of wood, so I really have no idea what it costs. Like you, I will go through this slowly - after I burn through the "less good" wood, of which I still have a cord or so.
DeleteWhat a blessing! Useful for anything you need a fire for. :-)
ReplyDeleteHere, the Sheriff's Department has random firewood giveaways; but I don't recall anyone doing anything like that.
You all be safe and God bless!
Linda, that is just the sort of place The Ranch is in. Very much old time small town America in that sense.
DeleteI'm doing much the same. Helping a brother clean up a good deal of oak, with some maple and locust too. He doesn't burn wood, and I do, so it's free for my effort and gas to go get it.
ReplyDeleteA recent discussion on another blog about stacking cord wood had this comment that still has me chuckling: "Stack your wood so a squirrel can squeeze through but the cat chasing it can't."
Greg, how wonderful! Oak is my preferred wood there, but I will definitely take anything thing that shows up.
DeleteThat is not bad advice about the spacing - sadly, I do not think a squirrel is making it through that pile...
That's lovely! Buying firewood here has gotten more and more expensive over the years, so a gift like that would be priceless.
ReplyDeleteIt really is Leigh - and quite unexpected. We now have a very long fuel runway.
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