Saturday, August 27, 2016

Sawdust ocean

We added to the sawdust ocean that is Hardwood Hermitage.  Large pieces of red oak and red maple from recent sessions were cut to stove-sized lengths, and then stacked.  The first pic shows some of the new sawdust the big saw created today.


After the cutting, the pieces were added to a pile near our wood shed.  None of this will burn for more than a year!


This is a close up of red oak, prized for its many uses and cool grain.  The wood does a great job in the stove -- the species is perhaps the best firewood that is common to New England.


Some of tomorrow's victims, branch pieces and some thinned trees, will also burn.  The small saw will do this work.


Saturday, August 20, 2016

Extensive trail work

Hardwood Hermitage has echoed with the sounds of Stihl power tools for more than 4 years.  A big period of work has occurred with trail maintenance started on Monday.  Several areas with existing trail, like the loop mentioned previously, have been widened with the trimmer (again, the brush cutter with spool and line, not the saw blade).  Some older trails received special attention for the first time in a while.  Here are some pics taken today of the work, which will continue tomorrow.  That should be the last day of trail work for a while!  Ten tanks of gas (nearly two gallons) burned in five days!

This is a pic of the trail just west of the house, heading toward the start of the loop.  Down you go on the north slope!




The loop begins here, a bit north of the first pic.



Baby birches, everywhere as our fans know, mark the trail in many places.  But to call the grove on the right babies may be an insult.  Growing so fast, several of the trees are 30 feet tall, adding about 4 feet a year!  And today's sun had to help!


After a big dip to the north, the east side of the loop turns mainly west.  This is a primary way to get to blackberry bushes and some lovely parts of the property.


This connector trail is near the house.  It's a way to get from the loop to the main eastern trail that also goes primarily north.


The eastern trail isn't quite as pristine as the loop.  There are more old stumps and rocks.




Sunday, August 7, 2016

A delightful morning of cutting

The other broken red maple was cut up today.  We had an excellent 90 minutes of work.  More fodder for the wood stove! Most likely, none of this will burn until early 2018.





Walking by baby birches

Relatively speaking, trees are still babies when they are already 12 feet tall.  Young paper birch groves are simply wonderful places to be.  The optimism of new life, the pleasant air rustling leaves, and the sheer awesome sight of transitioning bark.  These types of photos show why Hardwood Hermitage abounds with life that never takes a step.