2010, our first year of cutting wood by hand. I year I will never forget. I broke the sledge hammer once, and only once back then.I basically split the wood with an sledge hammer and wedge. We had large rounds, so I rolled them out and worked them that way, every afternoon, just before the kids got home from school.
You can read about this: here. I split an entire cord by hand that year. We used spare cardboard boxes to hold the branches and pieces suitable for kindling. Every time I started a fire in the wood stove I would go to the (what we call) the "wood barn" and fetch a container full of kindling.
We are blessed with a wooded area, mostly behind us, but along the north and south, with trees. Every year we have access to dead trees.
We also have friends and family that contact us when they are cutting down a tree, or know of someone who is. Or know of someone that has a downed tree from a recent storm and needs it taken away.
However, a few years later, a family member purchased a wood splitter at a good price and we made a barter. I can't remember what we traded. The splitter runs on gas, and we only run it empty so many times before we give it a break to rest. We have to work fast to get the most of our work done. Typically, Hubby puts the wood under, I run the splitter handle (never taking my eyes off of what we are doing), and the kids catch and stack.
Lately, it's just Hubby and I, so it goes a bit slower, but we get the job done.
As the years went by, we tallied and figured what amount we would use, or need (all depends on the type of wood we have too). Some years, during -22°F windchills, we went through a lot more. I haven't measured that width of where we store the wood, but we have figured we need three good tall rows stacked before each winter. And as high as I can reach, which is pretty tall.
When we remove the furniture from the front porch for the winter, we load it up with firewood.
We never burn pine, elm is horrible to split (stringy but burns nice), and cottonwood burns up like paper (although it heats well). Pine is basically good for an outdoor fire that you are not cooking over. There are many sites online that give you information on the best woods to burn in a home wood stove.
Also, with a wood stove (or fireplace), you must tend to it and clean it yearly. We prefer a professional at this point. Hubby and I are not ready to climb the roof where we'd need to access the stove pipe. It's on the second floor and on the steep part of the roof. We almost attempted one year, but paid the professionals.
And with wood cutting and splitting, there is the need for safety. We use hand, eye and head protection, however, we have yet to buy the safety chaps (and it's on my "to buy" list this year).
This entire post just reminded me we need to sharpen the chainsaw blades this week. Winter storms blessed us with a few downed trees.

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