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woodyguy

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Everything posted by woodyguy

  1. An 18 inch is a serious heavy saw for ground work. Although I've got bars from 12 to 36 inches the saw I pick up the most is a 211 with 14inch on it. Will do all the jobs you describe perfectly. Wielding a heavy 60cc saw at arms length on a hedge is too much like hard work and very dangerous. For the weight the 211 is hard to beat, and at the end of a long day, weight is everything!
  2. I suppose if you did it when the leaves were green then it must reduce a few percentage the water content of the wood. I'd like to see some evidence before spending much time on it though. Same idea as felling and leaving on ground whilst leaves on. Hard to see it making more then a couple of weeks reduction in drying time though.
  3. Get the ones mentioned from Rob. They're streets ahead.
  4. This is my last post as this is silly. You buy a 0.7m3 bag for £50 and moan about poor value. You see a 1.0m3 bag for £70 and want to buy some. That's the same price per volume of logs as both are loose packed. As you say, you buying logs off people clearly isn't a good idea. Best to cut your own! Good luck.
  5. Is that stacked or loose loaded?
  6. They will burn but badly. If split fairly small and stacked they will lose 1% of water every 2-3 days if sunny and per week if not. (my observations) So 50% to start and 20% to be ideal. That's 15-30 weeks so say 5 months. I'm burning this week Birch cut in April and split in June. Now at 16% but it was stacked in full sun and it's been a hot summer.
  7. Fair enough. So what have you learnt that will enable you to get a better deal next time? You paid a fair price for the wood you got. Briquettes are horrible and not logs. Still I do agree that it is best to ask if you are not sure.
  8. You can't watch it too often. Great excuse to repost.
  9. But Bowlander what would you have done differently if you'd seen his post? You paid the going rate that most people pay for the correct amount of logs. If he had sold you 0.7m3 of solid logs then you'd have simply paid more. If you wanted more why didn't you buy two bags? If you'd paid him £100 expecting a "ton" of logs then you'd have something to complain about. I agree that sellers can be confusing but this sounds very clear and besides you've got a chainsaw and axes so you understand wood volumes and fair prices.
  10. carpenter, yes it is real. I bought 10l from them recently. came next day. pretty impressive price
  11. Cone with fleshy cover
  12. Like you I'm new to milling but really value the support and ideas on this forum. Looking forward to pictures of your latest project!
  13. afhillandson are good price with a wide range. Gaver is good for growth and disease but just read up on line.
  14. I use a seven ton electric and it needs using carefully. I suspect that if your log length is short (nothing personal!) then a four way with straight grain would work. My logs are all 16inch and I suspect that it would get stuck half the time with the four way. Good tool though for general use.
  15. The growth rate and coppicing ability of hybrid poplar makes them attractive. Need to choose the right variety for disease resistance and keep them well away from Larch. I've been growing Gaver this year which certainly puts on a few feet quickly.
  16. all less dense woods like poplar burn quickly. And oak burns very slowly. Everything else is somewhere in between. If you have an open fire then spitting becomes a problem with some woods. With stoves, you just have to make them up more often. All woods burn equally well when dry. Some are more calorie dense but weight for weight they have the same amount of energy. I've just come back from Norway where Birch seems to be the main prized firewood. Here many don't like it because it burns hot and quickly.
  17. woodyguy

    What!

    Bear in mind that this isn't the only criteria they assess you on but will have some points in the score system linked to it. So if you could say that you use less vehicles, bio diesel, aspen, veg oil for chain etc etc then you will get a few brownie points. In reality they don't check if you really do what you say, so you can probably get a few points for nothing. Best not to claim a horse if you're not using one!
  18. Very impressive. Visually excellent, good text and hardly any typos! Congrats
  19. Field maple prefers reasonably open conditions but it's growth is glacial compared to robinia. Nice tree all the same though. Others to consider in full sun are Eucalyptus nitens and caucasian wingnut.
  20. You will need to keep the weeds down, either with tree/rabbit shelters and spray or strimmer. As for partial shade, sweet chestnut is happy and robinia will grow well. Hazel is fine if damp but not that vigorous.
  21. I think 600mm is coppicing not pollarding. One metre is way too close. Maximum yield is 1.5m but lots of initial costs and quite a few die off. Most people choose 2m as the best combination of yield vs initial cost. If it's wet I'd go for Alder (black, red or gray), siberian elm or a poplar hybrid if you want logs. And yes birch has to be young but anything under 20 years will coppice well. Nothing like the yields on poplar/alder/elm though.
  22. That link doesn't work for me try this Elvaston Castle Woodland Festival | Derby City Council Elvaston castle is a Capability Brown era landscape garden with an excellent collection of trees anyway.
  23. The customer is never wrong!
  24. Certainly echo the endorsement of stihl mulching blade. I've got lots of different blades but essentially keep this on most of the time. Will eat anything up to 1-2 inch thick. Brambles are dead easy and even chops out the roots. I'd go for the bigger one again as with mulchers and clearing saws you can't have too much power.
  25. Interesting. Share your concern and irritation at removing and disposing. What cost are these though?

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