How much fire wood

jim phillips

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I am getting a 40' tractor trailer load of oak trees delivered to the house for fire wood the logger said it will be about 25 tons of wood, any idea how many cords i will get out of it once it is cut and split ?
 

pjc

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Re: How much fire wood

good question===<br /><br />Info----> web page<br /><br />--8.6 cords???--
 

JB

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Re: How much fire wood

Our local oaks (Burr and red) lose as much as 50% of their weight when fully seasoned.<br /><br />Volume doesn't change noticably, though. :)
 

JasonJ

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Re: How much fire wood

Oak for firewood, does it work well? Up here we use Tamarac, Red Fir, and Birch. There isn't any oak that I know of....
 

scamper

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Sep 26, 2003
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Re: How much fire wood

lucky jim<br />If he puts 50,000 of oak on a 40’ trailer and has to go any distance, you might be able to burn the trailer as well.
 

bubbakat

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Oct 29, 2002
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Re: How much fire wood

jason oak,seasoned, will produce a good long burning fire.Lucky jim I use wood myself and I for one can't tell you how much you will get out of it but I can tell you one thing you will be one sore person when you get thru cutting and splitting all that oak.<br /> unless you do like i did go and buy yourself a 20 ton log splitter :D :D :D
 

pjc

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Re: How much fire wood

---anyone go that link I posted--conversion (math) is there---I'm still thinking around 9 cords----<br /><br />--what you pay for that LJ--here in WI we pay about $125-$150 cord hardwood-split and delivered-
 

scamper

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Re: How much fire wood

Here in Houston we use the live oak. Very nice, long and clean burning wood when cured. But as bubbakat stated that is a lot of wood to cut and split, for that matter to store. If you yield 9 cords and you live in FL., got to wonder how long it will take to use all that wood?
 

Homerr

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Mar 4, 2002
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Re: How much fire wood

When I was still burning wood, I'd go through approx. 2 1/2 cords per season.<br /><br />Oak is good wood, but it leaves a lot of ash.<br />Madrone is the choice wood around here. It burns nice and hot, and leaves almost no ash.<br /><br />YES! A log splitter. Get one now, or get ready for regular visits to your chiropractor.<br /><br />And you better start chopping, cause once it's cured...You might as well set the whole log on fire, cause you ain't splitting' nothin!<br /><br />H.
 

wikelam

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Apr 21, 2003
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Re: How much fire wood

Here in Oklahoma we go by the rick. which i think is 2 rick per cord. I usually sell the wood, do not burn it. get about 50-70 per rick. One guy bought about 12 rick from me and hauled it on a trailer. only filled it 3/4 of the way. would think that it would be about 16-20 rick, or 8-10 cords, i think?
 

neumanns

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Re: How much fire wood

A cord of wood is 4'x4'x8' foot stacked or 128sf.<br /><br />IF the logs are 8' long ( wide on the trailer) and 8' high and 40' foot long you theretically have 8x8x40=2560sf divide by 128sf= 20 cords. However 8' logs do not stack as tight as split firewood so it is my guess you will net closer to 14-16 cords. but it will all depend on the tightness of the load due to log straithness.<br /><br />However based on weight the guess is much lower. green oak (fresh cut)weighs between 4900 lbs for red oak and 5600 lbs for white oak per cord. <br /><br />Dry weight per cord of red oak is around 3500lbs and white oak is around 4200.<br /><br />Assuming this is green cut oak 25000lbs should get you around 5-6 cords of cut split and stacked firewood.<br /><br />seems to me a 40'trailer "load" may be streatching the envelope a bit but he has told you the weight also. <br /><br />If you dont mind me asking what did it cost?
 

jim phillips

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Re: How much fire wood

Thanks for the replys, and yess I know it will be a bunch, I have a 24 ton splitter and 5 kids to help there old man out with it. <br />I heat with wood and plan to sell a lot of it I can get $65.00 for a face cord 16" X 4 x 8 or $195.00 a cord. I am gussing about 10 to 14 cord on the truck, that will give me 30 to 40 face cords. Wish me luck and I will let you know how it works out.
 

KennyKenCan

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Re: How much fire wood

Does anyone know the answer to that old riddle that goes...<br /><br /> "How much wood can a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood?" :D <br /><br />Kenny
 

JGREGORY

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Re: How much fire wood

I have a gas fireplace. :D Flip a switch and I have a nice fire without the backbreaking work for .01's and hour. :D :D
 

jim phillips

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Re: How much fire wood

Kenny <br />I will let you know :D <br /><br />jgregory<br />Not as much fun! :(
 

KennyKenCan

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Re: How much fire wood

You know jgregory, your taking all the fun out of having a fireplace.<br /><br />What with the wood gathering and stacking, then bringing it in the house, with all sorts of little frozen creatures attached, that spring to life in your living room, the ashes and the dryed out furniture, the kindling wood and newspaper required to get it started.<br /><br />I just can't understand how anyone would want to give that up, for a flick of a switch. :D <br /><br />Kenny
 

SpinnerBait_Nut

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Re: How much fire wood

Someone mention a woodchuck?<br /><br />The woodchuck, or groundhog, is one of the best known wild mammals in Missouri, but few realize this rodent is a member of the Squirrel Family. Its common name, woodchuck, is an anglicized corruption of an Indian name for this species. The origin of its other name, groundhog, is obvious from the animal's squat appearance, waddling gait and habit of living in the ground.<br /><br />Description. This common Missouri rodent varies from 16-27 inches (406-685 mm) in length; it has short, powerful legs and a medium-long, bushy, and somewhat flattened tail. The long, coarse fur of the back is a grizzled grayish brown with a yellowish or reddish cast. Woodchucks weigh 4-14 pounds (1.8-6.3 kg), being lightest in spring when they are just out of hibernation and heaviest in fall prior to hibernation. <br /><br />Distribution and abundance. When North America was first settled, woodchucks were relatively scarce, but as timbered areas were opened and woodland edge, fence rows and meadows increased, the chuck's range expanded and the animals prospered. Now, this species is common everywhere in Missouri except in the Mississippi Lowland where it is rare. In the latter locality, the water table is so close to the surface that denning sites are limited mostly to dikes and levees.<br /><br />Habitat and home. Woodchucks prefer to live along the edges where timbered areas are bordered by open land or along fence rows and heavily vegetated gullies or stream banks. Here they dig their burrows. The main entrance is often located beneath a tree stump or rock and is usually conspicuous because of a pile of freshly excavated earth and stones. Side entrances are smaller and better concealed. The tunnels lead to an enlarged chamber, 3-6 feet (.9-1.8 m) underground, which contains the nest. <br /><br />Habits. By the end of October, most woodchucks are curled up in a profound sleep in their underground nest. So deep is this sleep that even if an animal is warmed up, it requires several hours to awaken. Woodchucks usually hibernate all winter, although during periods of mild weather, some individuals may awaken.<br /><br />In Missouri, emergence from hibernation begins as early as the first week of February, but severe cold weather may delay this. As the daily temperatures rise and plant growth increases, the chucks spend more and more time above ground. During this period, the main activity is feeding and basking in the spring sun.<br /><br />In digging, the front feet and claws are used primarily, but the teeth may be employed to move stones or cut roots. The amount of subsoil removed in the course of digging one burrow averages 716 pounds (325 kg). Digging is done so rapidly that a small burrow can be finished in one day, though upkeep is continued as long as the burrow is occupied.<br /><br />Foods. The woodchuck is almost a complete vegetarian, eating leaves, flowers and soft stems of various grasses, of field crops such as clover and alfalfa, and of many kinds of wild herbs. Certain garden crops like peas, beans and corn are favorites. Chucks occasionally climb trees to obtain apples and pawpaws which they relish.<br /><br />Reproduction. The breeding season begins in mid-February soon after the animals emerge from hibernation. Pregnancy lasts 31-33 days and the the single, annual litter is born toward the end of March. At birth, the two to nine young are naked, blind and helpless. They measure about four inches (101 mm) long. The eyes open when the young are about 4 weeks old; although the kits come to the opening of the burrow at this time, they seldom venture outside until 6 or 7 weeks old. By midsummer, the young are 20 inches (508 mm) long and weigh about four pounds (1.8 kg). About this time, they may dig temporary burrows near the nursery which they use for a short period. Later, they move some distance away and establish their own homes.<br /><br />Importance. Woodchucks formerly were trapped for their fur, which was used for cheap fur coats. The flesh of young and lean animals is good food.<br /><br />The role of the woodchuck as a builder of homes for other animals is significant; because of this, the woodchuck occupies an important niche in the wildlife community. Skunks, foxes, weasels, opossums and rabbits all use woodchuck burrows for their dens. Also, because tremendous quantities of subsoil are moved in the course of burrow construction, the countless generations of woodchucks have contributed much to the aeration and mixing of the soil. Woodchucks are one of the few large mammals abroad in daylight, and many people get enjoyment from seeing them.<br /><br />The woodchuck's taste for truck garden and agricultural crops often places it in an unfavorable position with farmers. Sometimes chucks burrow into levees and create erosion problems.<br /><br />Management. Where woodchucks are too plentiful, they can be killed in their burrows by poisonous gases, but poison should only be handled by a competent person who is acquainted with state and federal laws. Trapping with wire-mesh box traps is preferable to using steel, leg-gripping traps, since the woodchuck is such a strong animal it often pulls free from the latter. Hunting with guns can control the local population and provide some sport as well.
 

JasonJ

Rear Admiral
Joined
Aug 20, 2001
Messages
4,163
Re: How much fire wood

$195 a cord, good Lord. I payed $200 for 3 1/2 cords, cut and split. I did have to go and get it though, which was not fun at all. My truck has a 6 1/2 foot bed, so even with cab-high sides I whipped up out of old ply and 2x4s, I still could only carry 2/3rds of a cord per trip. The thing that sucked the most was I had to stack it in the truck, then unload it at the house, then throw it through the basement window, and finally stack it again in the basement. I must have moved that stinkin' wood five million times, but now I can just walk downstairs and grab wood at my leisure, no goin' outside.<br /><br />Being an Exterminator, I often get the fine priveledge of gassing chucks, voles, pocket gophers, trapping skunks, raccoons, packrats, eliminating and removing bats and their resulting guano then repairing the entrance points. Then of course all the great pest insects and other arthropods that give people grief. From what I understand, a woochuck can chuck 2.7 metric tons of wood per hour when at full steam... :D :D :D
 
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