Hi,
I have trial loaded some Medallion 52 x 85cm bags with both hard and softwood with the bag uniformly packed (i.e. all logs laid parallel across the bag) with small round and split logs to create a 7" x 13" x 26" pack that weighs about 20 Kg (hw) and 17 Kg (sw).
I will take a digi pic today and try uploading later.
I very much doubt if full costing is being worked out and applied to sell a bag of firewood for £5.00 and would speculate that this price is established and driven more by what it is perceived that the market will stand. Fuel prices are rising dramatically and so too should firewood prices move in line with general energy market prices. A customer who burns firewood to stay warm will buy firewood by the tipper load but the person who buys firewood in a bag does so to stay cheery and might never even light that firewood.
The activities needed to create firewood are as follows :-
Buy / Rent land
Plant / Grow Tree
Fell Tree
Delimb Tree
Buck tree to chord wood length
Extract / Carry to vehicle
Drive vehicle to yard
Stack chordwood
Cut chordwood into firewood logs
Split logs
Stack logs / pile
Retrieve logs from pile & load Net Sacks
Tie & label sack
Stack Net sacks
Load vehicle with sack(s)
Deliver firewood to customer
and then there are capital cost overheads to consider :-
Chainsaw & Consumables, Protective clothing, Vehicle & Trailer, Firewood storage / drying shed, Yard
This an awful lot of effort for a fiver !
To increase the price of firewood the product needs to be differentiated i.e. a hierarchy of prices applied for different types of firewood, so for example :-
Hardwood (top grade)
e.g. oak, ash, beech, cherry, apple, pear, hawthorn
Hardwood (lower grade)
e.g. elm, willow, birch, chestnut (?), holly, poplar
Softwood (top grade)
e.g. Larch, Douglas Fir
Softwood (lower grade)
e.g. Pine, Western Red Cedar
In terms of value for money all that really matters is the weight of seasoned (dry) firewood being sold however it would appear that currently firewood is being sold by volume in a non price discriminatory fashion e.g. mixed hard / softwood and of varying dryness.
It's difficult to comprehend how Trading Standards continue to allow this non comparative and unmeasurable practice for the sale of firewood to continue since for example in the sale of almost every other product the control of sale by "weights and measures" is extremely tight.
Regards
Chilterns
p.s Robied - what kind of 25litre container are you using - sounds like a cost efficent and effective solution.