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Wood gathering weekend – Now the real work begins

Category : Journal

We spent a good portion of this past Sunday afternoon gathering, actually hauling (more about this later), wood from the property next to ours over to our place for splitting and stacking.  Here is this weekend’s haul.

Wood Pile

Here in Alabama, forestry is the number one industry.  Here are a few interesting facts that I found through the Alabama Forest Owner’s Guide.

Facts about Alabama’s Forests and Forest Industry

  • Alabama’s forests cover more than 22 million acres, or 67% of the total land
  • Alabama currently has about 23 billion cubic feet of timber "in the bank"
  • There are twice as many trees in Alabama today as there were 50 years ago
  • For every tree harvested in Alabama, 5 are planted
  • Alabama’s forest are: 35% pine, 45% hardwood, and 20% mixed pine and hardwood
  • There are over 700 species of birds living in Alabama’s forests
  • Private, non-industrial landowners own 71% of Alabama’s forests
  • There are over 1,100 forest products manufacturing operations in Alabama
  • Forestry is Alabama’s No. 1 industry
  • About 170,000 people are employed directly or indirectly by Alabama’s forest industry

Many landowners in Alabama, whose property consists of large plots of timber, frequently sell their timber to the forest industry here.  This "sale" of the timber gives the company the ability to come onto the property and basically clear cut and haul away all the timber they desire.  Depending on the company, they may require hardwood or softwood, like pine. 

In our area, it is most often the paper mill who gathers the timber and they are only interested in the pine.  This leaves behind a huge bounty of hardwoods that have been literally plucked from the ground by massive machines.  The pines are picked and loaded on trucks.  The hardwoods are sometimes, but not always, piled off to the side as biomass

The property owner next to us sold his pine timber this summer and now we have a plethora of hardwood to collect and haul home, with his blessing.  Thus, clearing the property for the next generation of timber.  So, if you try to reach me on chat, twitter, or Skype and I don’t answer, you can make a safe bet that I am out splitting and stacking wood.

New Lampstand

Category : From Previous Blog, Journal, Knitting In Motion

I needed a floor stand for my daylight lamp and decided that I did not want to drop $60+ on a metal one so, as usual, I looked around for something I could use to make one myself. This is what I came up with.

The log is from a cedar tree here on the property that we were cutting up for firewood. I figured how tall I needed it and Scott cut it to length for me. Then it was just a matter of sanding it down and putting on several coats of polyurethane to seal it. I drilled a hole for my lamp to fit in and viola! This was my first attempt at any creative woodworking outside of cutting molding pieces, etc. I think It turned out great and it works beautifully.

A Cord of Wood

Category : From Previous Blog, Journal, Knitting In Motion

Can you guess what this goes to?


October 6, 2006

YES!! The wood-burning stove has finally been installed.


Receiving Operating Instructions


It looks so good on our hearth and is ready to be used. We have already been busy gathering and splitting firewood. Conveniently, there is a mill nearby where log trucks haul their loads and for one reason or another they sometimes drop their loads on the side of the road near the entrance or even in the parking lot of a vacant gas station nearby. We have found this to be an unbelievable source of free fire wood for anyone who wants to haul it away.


FREE Firewood

In September, we purchased a log splitter on sale at Home Depot (apparently at about half price according to my parents) and got busy.


Log Splitter


Meager Beginnings (9-20-2006)

We have collected several trailer loads to date of both pine and mixed hardwood. My father in law is afraid, at this point, that we are going to go into the lumber business. HA HA


Wood Collection as of October 24, 2006

One thing we love to burn in our fire pit is cedar. We found a dead cedar on the back part of the property our house is on, hooked a chain to it and dragged it to the splitter with the community tractor. While cutting it apart with the chain saw the tree began humming. We didn’t consider this normal so we investigated further. The tree was (and had been for quite some time) the home to a huge number of carpenter bees. These bees are extremely large and don’t fly very fast either. However, they still look a little menacing. We left the cut apart pieces to rest for about a week thinking the bees would relocate. No such luck. So we claimed their home with our log splitter and a little delicate handling (and a little bee spray).


How bad do we want this log?