Sunday, November 29, 2015

Thinning of red maple

Throughout Hardwood Hermitage, red maple (acer rubrum) grows profusely. As a second-tier species, the tree often becomes kindling for us. We did a lot of thinning today in one area in order for young birches, sugar maple, and red oak to find more sunlight. The little chainsaw had red maple falling furiously, especially because the pesky species has a tendency to grow in clumps (stump sprouts), with maybe a dozen trunks crowded together. Here are some pictures from today's carnage: This is a before/after shot of the area we worked in. Notice the significant reduction of standing red maple in the second picture. Also, the piles of cut and lopped future kindling are visible in the second picture.
Much work is involved in making the cut stuff today ready to burn. But we have a nice addition to our 2017 kindling, while also helping the forest by reducing the large amount of competition in the woods.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Always thankful for wood

Happy Thanksgiving! A before/after series of pics once again demonstrates that our wood preparation for the next season is continually on our mind.
We take our stacking of wood very seriously. Here's the two previous pics after cutting, splitting, and stacking. Most of this won't be burned until after next Thanksgiving!
A bit of forest thinning of broken and dead birch and red maple was brought over this morning to create our next cutting pile. With warmth and little precip, we have yet to put the snow blower on the tractor, so three loads in the big bucket moved this from west of the house.

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Birch retrieval

We did several hours of work this morning to bring up some broken paper birch. Two broken trees beyond the last terrace were cut down, then cut to about 22 inches. We moved each piece up, along with some red maple, all the way to the house. Some splitting will be done, then the pieces will be cut again for fitting into the stove next season. The morning's job will only give us about one-fifth of a cord, which isn't much. But the work was satisfying -- more labor to bring up our own heat!
We won a door prize at a neat craft store in Dalton, about five miles south of here. We make an annual trek there to find Christmas decoration. The basket included great crackers and other treats.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Moosewood

This clump of striped maple is living up to its nickname, "moosewood." Moose really like to eat the bark off of them.
Here's a sunset panorama from today. The similar picture posted in May looks much different, because the sun is so much further south in the sky in November.