Born in the Sixties

View Original

Lumberjack life

Earlier in the summer, I started looking for firewood. I had a big, central fireplace in the cabin, but the previous owners had burned all but a solitary piece of wood. Time to stock up.

I had no idea how much I would need, so I settled in on “a lot”. I had one vendor drop off 2 full cords of 6 foot logs. A second vendor dropped off 2 full cords of rounds. The logs required the extra step of running a chain saw before the splitting could start. I cut all but a small number of logs and got busy splitting. It would be a few more weeks before the rounds would be delivered anyway.

Piles of wood and work to do in August.

Lumberjack Crossfit

Since I’ve been working at home since March, having an activity to counter-balance sitting at a desk, staring at a computer has been a blessing in disguise. Although swinging a log splitting maul is work, it actually has many benefits. Yes, it is a decent workout, as is gathering up all the pieces and stacking them. But it is relaxing and satisfying, too. When a round comes flying apart after a well-aimed swing, you can’t help but smile. The next log may be a twisty, knotted up mess, so no need to get cocky.

The Science of Stacking

I saw a video online about building Holzhousens as a storage method. It looked more interesting than just stacking in rows. After filling up the storage bins in the house, and a couple racks on the porches near the doors, I had enough split wood to build two Holzhausen’s, each about 5 feet tall and 8 feet in diameter. Some people also toss odd shaped pieces in the donut hole. Mine are mostly empty, except for some old fencing cut to 8 feet long used as cross-braces, a few feet off the ground.