Jeff Ivers
Well-known member
That is a lot of firewood!
It's just enough. On the farm, we had to have about 200 cord put up to heat the necessary.That is a lot of firewood!
That wood shed blows me away. My grandparents once heated with coal and then switched to wood and would fill the old coal bin with wood. That has been a lot of years ago and I don't have any clear recollection of how much wood it held or how often they refilled it, but that wood shed has far more firewood than I have seen anywhere except a commercial sales lot. I sometimes have as much as 3 ricks of wood stockpiled (about 1 cord) and burn about half that in my fireplace during a cold winter.Kay & Jeff. . . Well, yes. It is a lot, and just enough. That photo is from the wood shed up north. It feeds the Fisher Stove, which is a nice simple design that works extremely well. The mid coast house has a couple of newer stoves. Not as simple, but also burn cleaner and extract more heat. (Less wood.) There we use maybe 4 cords per year to supplement the heat pump and avoid burning propane.
Thank you both for stopping by. It's very encouraging!![]()
That's probably 6 ish cords. (4 x 24' rows 6' high) I think that's about as much as I can get through a stove in a winter.That wood shed blows me away. My grandparents once heated with coal and then switched to wood and would fill the old coal bin with wood. That has been a lot of years ago and I don't have any clear recollection of how much wood it held or how often they refilled it, but that wood shed has far more firewood than I have seen anywhere except a commercial sales lot. I sometimes have as much as 3 ricks of wood stockpiled (about 1 cord) and burn about half that in my fireplace during a cold winter.
@Prospecter, that looks like me when I was in my 20s living in the Hudson Valley. Only difference is the color of your porch deck. I built a little 16x32 deck on the South (back) side of the house. The only door on the back of the house was the one one on the left that led to the kitchen so it made sense to replace the dining room window with a sliding door. It allowed us to enjoy the view of the Hudson year round. I stained the deck Ebony and made an opening for a tree near the edge. In Summer the tree shaded a fair bit of the deck and in the Winter it was bare and allowed the sun to hit the deck. Also warmed up the dining room nicely. On a calm 20°F day we could sit out there in Tee shirts and shorts and **** up some Vitamin D.


@Prospecter, the deck was originally going to be 12x12 and a kind of extension of the kitchen, which had two large windows so we could see the Hudson from there. When I suggested the 6-foot sliding glass doors in the dining room I expected to be told no. Instead I got an enthusiastic 'yes' and the deck turned into a 12x24. That deck would have ended at the edge of the sliding door so another 8 feet made sense. The picnic bench and furniture were pretty large and it became: "Why not 16x32?" and it was just about perfect. Just before we left New York for Florida I planned to enhance the railings and add handrails to the stairs but the transfer happened so fast it didn't get done.Bob: Not sure I'd classify a 16x32 as "Little!" Nice looking deck. Must have been lovely sitting out and watching the Hudson. Whereabouts were you? We knew someone in Castleton in the 80s.
The porch in the picture is on hold until it is a bit warmer. It was chilly to be out there in a T shirt, but not too bad for the brief moment of a single cut.
Thanks for stopping by.




















The new drill press! This was my fourth stop in Chesterville. I needed to dismantle it to get it out of its garage and into the car, then reassemble it in my shop. The runout is 0.010" which is a bit excessive. I'll need to sort that out at some point. Probably some combination of worn bearings and misalignment.Thanks for stopping in. As you know, it is highly encouraging!Sorry I haven’t made time to find and check out your thread but it’s on my watchlist now. That garage looks amazing and I’ll try to get time to read more as I have time.
Have a grand day!!





























So long as it's full of water, it'll make a great relocation spot.The critters are relocated to an old quarry up the road. I have learned my neighbor also relocates critters there.
Scuba.Swimming lessons?









