My brother was the most honest guy, he would cut and split wood to his costumers specs. Dry it. The wood was as good as it gets for selling. They still complained. After 25 years selling wood, he stopped doing it cold . Dealing with the public got the best of him!
My friends dad was pissed drunk one day and told him to come over he wanted to give him some sage wisdom, thinking it was going to be something for the ages he went over at which point his dad said “most people are idiots”! ... we’ve laughed about it for years because he was a hardcore cynic but as we’ve gotten older we realize he was 110% correct and actually now it’s something I always remind myself off anytime I have to deal with the public and man it really helps cause instead of being disappointed I’m sometimes pleasantly surprised...anyways sounds like your brother found this out himself also
That’s one of the main reasons I stopped selling firewood. Everybody that called me wanted to harp at me about “ the last guy “ they bought wood from, and how he ripped them off. I would ask , “ Have you ever bought from me ? “. They would reply “ uh………..no. “ I would tell them to go call “ the last guy “ and b**ch him out . Then I would hang up on them. I had so many regular customers I ALWAYS ran out of wood , every Fall.
Having cut, burned, and sold firewood for 47 years, I can honestly say that I would buy wood from you in a heartbeat! I have seen first-hand some of the s**t some wood sellers try to pawn off as "seasoned." If you put salt and pepper on it, it's "seasoned" right? Thank you for being so honest and straight forward. May your chains remain sharp all season!
I ended up running out of good dry logs to burn this summer. (have plenty of kindling, just ran out of ready to go big stuff) So had to actually BUY some. I opted to go pick it up, rather than have it delivered as he was local. He had made these nice measured racks for his wood- each held 2 side by side 4'x4' stacks, so both stacks = 1 face cord. (he sells a lot of half face cords to vacationers with lake homes) I saw exactly what I was buying, and we loaded my truck right out of the rack. Got a half face cord of cherry and hickory for a very reasonable price- and it was a fair bit more wood than I'd thought it was. We both ended up happy- him with a wad of bills in his pocket, me with a big pile of cherry and hickory to grill over and drink beer by.
Hickory is one of the best Woods you can get for throwing BTUs cherries about in the middle but not bad you got a good deal. In my opinion I'm no professional or anything.
Waiting for our totalitarian administration in DC to start coming after us next. Stove emissions, stove types, laws against wood dealers, stove sellers. Alot more people have gas kitchen stoves than wood stoves.
Been selling firewood for 8 years now. I’m glad this guy can go through all the hoops to sell a premium product. Around here there is no money selling firewood. I usually barely break even and then complaints on top of it. Buying loads of logs and processing it you get what you get for wood. The bad stuff gets tossed aside but knots protruding and some hollow logs, No biggie. It’s all wood and it all burns. Knotty maple will split into odd chunks, No biggie as long as it’ll fit in the stove they’ll burn it at night. I personally throw it loose in the truck by hand and it gets dumped at the far side. I tell all my customers to get their wood early because it dries better at their house than mine. They stack a few cord up and the wind blows through all summer as they know it’s dry by winter. I have a few big piles of wood outside at my house. The stuff on top is dry but in the middle of the pile doesn’t get much airflow. It’s not about being dishonest. It’s about offering the best product that is practical and some things just aren’t practical. Like delivering 60 cord of firewood by stacking it all in the back of your truck and then unloading it by hand at the far end and sweeping the bark out with every load.
this guy does seem like a honest dude. I feel as long as your honest to your customers about what you got whether its green, dry, knotty, or beetle wood (like Ringo or Paul) and charge accordingly. not to big of deal how or what its brought loaded or stacked like when they bring it as long as its the amount i ordered after I stack it at my crib. if not ill try maybe one more time and move on to the next wood dealer. Either way stuff happens like is hard its impossible for me at least to perfect. People need a break sometimes. The benefit of a doubt. Please don't ever judge and label someone right off the bat. People and things are not what they seem most of the until you get to know them.
I sell firewood mostly to campers in the summer, I always make sure the moisture content is under 20%. Usually its 15 or under. I toss all the rotten wood in IBC cages and that becomes my bonfire wood for when my friends come over, my firepit is quite large.
@@TractorTech I thought you have a wood stove?? That "junk wood" you showed in this video still has plenty of BTUs , just use it in the day time or when you don't need as much heat, like the shoulder season.
I wish I had watched this video before buying firewood. Just about everything you said you wouldn't do my guy did. Much respect to honest people like yourself.
That is not a bad idea. If nothing else it would not be bad to carry one in the truck in case someone says the wood is not dry, then they could be proved wrong.
I totally agree with the ant wood. I find if I split it and ants come out, I throw it in a separate pile. I won’t stack it on my 8’ rack(about 3 days worth of firewood during the coldest days.) It’s drys fast due to the bore holes and rotten wood and it still burns well with the more dense firewood. I find my 2500 sq foot Btu drolet stove drys the wood on the rack as well seeing its only 6’ away from the rack. Great video from a fellow New Englander.
I finally found an honest seller and get what I want- Hardwood, split larger 6-8", and I prefer green to season two years myself and less expensive - I use two cords a year
Nice video Roger that should really help some folks that are new to buying firewood and maybe help some sellers be accurate in how they sell it. That’s one thing I pride myself in is having a measured amount based on cords or cubic feet.1/3 1/2 full etc
Thanks for the knowledge we definitely got scammed this year by almost all of the above methods and I live in southern Maine. I'd love to buy wood from honest good sellers like you but it seems they're hard to find.
@@TractorTech thank you, I just want to put it out there that I'm a non confrontational type of person. So I haven't/won't be calling to complain or anything. Before I even watched your video I felt like something was wrong. I got so much scraps/saw dust it was piled so high, I had to literally dig out each piece of wood. It took me 2 weeks to stack, 3 hours a day. I also found a huge piece of really heavy metal. I had two hole tarps worth of kindling and many wood that wasn't cut and a lot that won't fit in our wood stove. I account all of this to getting what I paid for and next year I'll definitely pay more for better quality with someone else as I understand that it is a lot of work in preparing the wood. Thank you again!
Thanks for the info. First Lady I bought from was honest, said she had cheap wood and premium. Charged $60 for a Rick (8x4) of cheap stuff. Came in clutch during ice storm. Second dude offered to deliver 2 ricks for me. Pulled up in an F-150 with a short bed. I pulled out an old 2x4 and some t post.. dude only brought less than 1.25 ricks and the my were cut to about 12 inches. I paid him for 1 Rick and let him know what I thought about his business ethics.
I buy wood from local sawmills. The wood half the time looks like blocks or boards that didn't get processed properly. But they usually give more per cord just to clear the yard of wood at a cheaper price. They say it's a cord but usually give an extra 1/4 on top. Since sawmills will scrap out weird looking wood it's good stuff since they don't usually send out bad construction products.
That's basically the firewood I sell - slabs and offcuts from my sawmill. I'm not in the firewood business - I'm in the sawmill business and just sell firewood to make better use of the scrap. I also do not sell my firewood as "premium" - always sell it as sawmill offcuts.
Good advice 👍 I season my wood 2 years. I also have wood that doesn't like to give up it's bark till the second year. I don't cut anything green, it's got to be dead. I don't tarp the wood just keep metal roofing on the top to keep air moving through it. Size of wood is always varying on the person. I split mine 6x6 size. Any smaller it would not last the night in my wood burner. I have enjoyed burning wood because it costs nothing for me. I have 8 acres of timber and always stuff dieing. Enough rantings. I leave comments on videos with good content.
Thanks Timothy. I don't like using tarp for wood either. I think they leak and hold the moisture in. I may try doing some larger splits again for my stove and see how it does.
Hi Tractor Tech - it's Big Rodders in Ireland, a subscriber. Thanks for a very informative video. Over here there is no legislation governing the sale of firewood regarding volume, log size or consistency, species mixing, moisture content etc etc etc. It's a totally free market, perhaps because it represents a very small percentage of heating options used.
Hi Big Rodders. The only law that I am of aware of in my state is wood is supposed to be stacked on a truck or trailer, and sold by the cord. You can't sell a pick up load, but people still do it. Have a good weekend!
I don’t sell firewood as I’m flat out keeping up with my own needs. But it’s amazing how people with stoves know so little about what they burn it’s almost scary.
Good points and I agree. One more thing to mention, lower quality wood. Premium firewood would not include maple, elm, walnut, cherry, pine as different woods give off differing amounts of heat. Those are great woods, but not what I would call premium. Oak, hedge, locust, hickory... those are premium firewood, if you heat with wood. If they just want something to crackle in the fireplace occasionally, sure, anything will do but for heating a home, those others won't do near as good of a job.
hi there good points . many years ago i knew a guy that made a fram or box out of 2 4x8 sheets of plywood in the back of his pickup stacked the wood in between the two 4x8s . he would dump it out after you saw it was full . ask you to step aside so you wouldn't get hurt . then dump it . well it was stacked in the front and back but thrown in in-between the front and back stack then straightened on the top middle to make it looked like it was all stacked . my sister bought it . knew something was funny . so she told me . i had her buy another cord when he got there so did i . she called weight and measures and the police . don't realy know what happened to him . but he never sold wood again john
I personally like a mix of larger and smaller splits. I'll tolerate some smaller rounds (no more than 6" in diameter). With that said, I'm not trying to cram a woodstove as full as possible. Instead, I'm usually doing a top-down burn in a fireplace and will mix in some smaller pieces with the larger pieces in the lower layers to help those layers catch.
Another big thing to do is start thinking about next year's firewood early! Don't wait till heating season is upon you to begin looking. Lots of guys will be out or nearly out of wood by then- at least good DRY wood. That's when you end up getting whatever they have- green; semi-seasoned; less desirable species; or just leftover "whatever I have laying around". And by early, I mean spring time at least! This gives your guy time to plan ahead, just like with any long-lead-time product. (and firewood is very definitely a long lead time product! Most hardwoods take a year or more to fully dry- oak can take TWO years!) Ordering early can also help with wood that isn't quite dry, as it'll have some time before you need to use it. Communication is key. There's nothing wrong with selling wood that's not ready to burn yet- as long as that fact is shared with potential buyers. Heck, if you've got the space and don't need the wood NOW, you can often get a better deal on it. It's the last minute "emergency" buyers who are at the mercy of whomever has wood to sell. And if the wood is for a fireplace, fire pit, campfires, etc; don't bust your wallet buying the high end premium wood, like oak, Hickory, locust, etc. Those woods are considered the best, because they burn long, and put out lots of heat, not because they produce nice bright flames or light easily. You're actually better off buying the "lesser" woods for recreational use- because they burn hot and bright! (just not long) and get going easily. Pine/spruce/cedar/larch also produce very good smelling smoke- that classic campfire smell. Poplar, Aspen and Basswood burn hot and bright- and don't pop and spit sparks like pine does. You can save yourself $$, and get great-for-the-purpose wood, if you don't just go with what "everyone" says is "The Best" wood. Just a few more points to think about when looking to buy firewood.
Most people don't think ahead. Some people act like the wood will spoil if the have some left over from one year to the next. I've never figured out why it is the sellers responsibly to have dry wood. If I was buying wood, I'd buy a year ahead to be sure I had dry wood.
its important to be honest when selling . ive had many conversations with customers about the wood i have. if they are asking for 3 cords of wood and all i have is 3 cords of not fully seasoned wood ill tell them that . ive sold wood at a discount if its slightly rotten at the edges , as long as the customer knows that up front . in my area if i bought premium log loads to sell id be making 5 dollars an hour .so i have to drive to the woods , fall the trees , buck them up and i cant always be as picky and choosey as id like on the species and premium quality . a lot of people in my area are happy to save a little money if the wood is not fully seasoned or the best hardwood in our area, as long as i tell them what their buying . i will never short the load either .
Thankyou.....one guy delivered 4 cord of yellow birch and must have scooped it up with a loader bucket as I had 13 full garbage cans of gravel and bark chip trash to clean up after. Another guy delivered round wood which I ordered with most of the bigger chunks being 14 inches and the small chunks 16 and s lot of bizarre shaped stuff I could not even split so could not use.....rotten stuff too.
@@TractorTech my eyeball has ALWAYS BEEN solid unless I choose to avoid knots and cheat it .... I'm a 42 yes old drywaller, now with the eye not getting ass much practice from seeing and blind-screwing off the rock I'm using a tape now since I'm selling that way I only sell 16" firewood. I admit when you cut only 30+ inch (@ the felling cut) fir it is a bit trickier than small medium because the sheer size of the round makes 16" look VERY short. So it's nice and easy....doesn't take more than 5 min. With an orange window/bingo marker
@@zacfiroved8069 yeah; I don’t have that ability. 1 foot or 1 mile. Same same! 🤣 I find that the accumark is better for when I’m cutting on wood piles. If you have good access to a log then the Mingo marker is the way to go.
Great video, second year wood burning, definitely fell for “seasoned” wood but not “dry” that’s another thing to think about when buying. Get your terms down right before you buy.
Thanks! I have seen seasoned wood that is not dry. I have seen dry wood that is not seasoned. The term seasoned varies from person to person. I guess if you cut and split a load on March 19 by march 20 it would be seasoned.
Also if the split wood is smaller in diameter it will dry faster if the wood is green when it’s being Processed which is good for the seller and the buyer.
In Australia we sell by weight not volume. They sell by volume in New Zealand. The issue in Austraila with our hardwood is although its meant to be dried, often its not at 20% or less so the customer is paying for moisture. Another thing is customers don't plan ahead and buy wood a year in advance stack it at their place to ensure it's dried out. I used to sell it in a woodyard and we had a guy come in everyday at 5 minutes to closing, buy 2 or 3 pieces ( yes really) and do it again and again. I asked him why not get a tonne delivered. His answer, its easier to take it from the boot of the car and burn straight away, saved having to store it and as he was in a rental he didn't want to leave any wood if he left. Good honest video mate, well done. A lot of people don't realise how much work there is in cutting and splitting wood.
Log here are sold by weight. I've never figured out how that works with various moisture contents and various species. The same here. Some people want to get a load and almost use it up, then they want another load. They act like it will spoil if they have any left over for the next year. That story about the guy getting 3 pieces at a time takes the cake. No people don't have a clue how much work it is to process wood.
I get the logic for the rental. There are townhome style apartments with fireplaces where I live. They don't really have space for storing firewood. You could maintain a small firewood stack at most.
Dude is a natural movie star. You can tell he's so relaxed and loose in front of the camera, not tense and looking like a tomcat shitting a tuna can. Nope, not at all. And as a fellow firewood entrepreneur, you can tell he's a natural at the firewood bidness. The way he chucked that piece of seasoned wood like a cat turd that totally disgusted him, was liking watch myself after I've handled the 30,000,000 stick of wood that day. Its uncanny really...
I started selling firewood for exactly these reasons. We kept being cheated and I figured that other people were too. Sure enough most of my customers say the same things. I like to give a few extra pieces of firewood with every face cord to be sure customers are satisfied.
Cool stuff. I'm in northern Alberta where we don't get many options for variety of trees, but volume works the same. My calculations I'd say around 200 cubic feet loose volume when dumped into a cone, but I suppose if it's split larger the measurement goes up.
The smaller your fire wood is split, the less wood you have. The larger split you get more wood. I split my wood so it drys faster. The other thing is. A round will burn longer then split. So after you get a bed of hot coals put a round in your stove. I'm 66 yrs old and have heated my home with wood over 40 yrs.
Yes sir. I've burned firewood for 48 winters as my only source of heat. Damp wood sucks. There's no such thing as too much wood. Split dry will keep your butt from freezing.
Geat info Roger.. I stack my loads in the truck and I usually clean it out every 3-4 loads.. Aslo when I wright up my Craigslist ads I say what I am using for a truck & trailer combo. than I figure if the buyer has Questions he can google what the truck is or ask. I have refereed off a few RUclips videos as well over the years just so the buyer is not hearing the info from me..
Thanks Daniel! That is good that you are upfront with the customer about what you are using to haul wood on. There is a website that has the dimensions of most truck beds.
I don't have much of a need for firewood anymore,but I see what people are doing.One thing that I've heard lately is that sellers are charging by the truck load now,instead of by the cord. A cord of split pine is currently selling for $185+ a cord right now!
@@larrybauman7430 nobody has to buy $185 wood. How do you know how much it cost him to process? Or do you expect everyone to give it away for less than it costs him?
@@johnraman1925 185 is a lot for pine, anyway you look at it. I don't care if you got a gold plated splitter blade your trying to pay for, that's to much for pine
I wonder if it would be good for business to put all of that information condensed on a flyer to give and leave at stores for people. Then you can hire a feller to help and stay ahead of things. Some firewood sellers have huge businesses using several machines and workers. Thanks for sharing honesty.
Some stores have a community billboard, that may a way to pick up some customers. Thanks for the idea! I may also be selling bundles at a country store. I'm thinking someone may ask the store if we sell bulk wood and I may pick up some sales like that. I didn't have any problem getting rid of the wood I had this year. I had someone cal today needing wood, but I am sold out. I am going to try to have more for this 2021-2022. Thanks for watching!
It really shouldn't be so hard to get good quality real seasoned firewood. Down here in Louisiana, these slicks don't season anything and will deliver a load of wood so green you can smell it from across your yard!
Just subscribed nice channel and nice to hear these different ways. Here in the Midwest there are A LOT of sellers of wood but not all of them are selling Firewood. have a good day. #slackoutdoors
People new to buying firewood also need to know the difference between "dry" and "seasoned". Moisture meters are a great investment if you're not familiar with different types of wood and how much they weigh when they're well seasoned.
We bought two cords of wood this winter and already ran into two of these problems. 1) hulking pieces that made loading efficiently, and 2) a very large portion of our woof was rotten and had a foamy appearance. It's nice to find someone who has a good example of what to watch for, that example showing the log cross section with only the inner ring worth burning is what 50% of our wood ended up being. Burned through both cords in 6 weeks. Will not be returning to that supplier
My neighbor ordered wood off of someone else because I could not get them wood soon enough. There were splits 8 or 9'' wide. Like your wood, as you described as foamy, he had a a lot of that. That is sap rot. That wood has not BTU value. You put it in the stove and poof it is gone. 3 cords in 6 weeks is a lot. The wood my neighbor got has bug damage too, and he lives in a log cabin.
@@TractorTech bought a half cord from another local place and, while more expensive, is significantly higher quality. 6 hour burn time without trying hard to pack efficiently, little to no sap rot, and manageable size pieces. More than I'd like to spend, but a pleasure to burn
Just buy a couple cords of logs.. (pref oak/birch (or any harder wood where ur from) get a saw and a splitter.. make a couple of afternoons splitting.. in the end its much cheaper.. and who needs premium wood.. xd... like its for burning bro.. not for looking good... Like these are crazy times but 100 bucks a cord for some decent logs aint bad.. or somthing like that.. order big.. have some work.. and ull have fire for long time.. I fit about 15 cords in my little shed.. lasts me 2-3 years..
Great video, another thing to consider, is wood being mixed with Pine. Now I don’t have an is stacking Pine for a outside Fire Pit, but careful burning in the house. The build up in the chimney can cause a house fire. If someone does burn Pine, dry it out real good in the sun, over the summer and over a year. You’ll have to clean you chimney a lot, maybe once a month. But if that’s all you have to keep warm, it’s better then freezing, just be careful….
That's way I do my own wood,!! I trust no one. my wife and two 5 year old twin boys and i cut and split and stack the wood. It nice to have a wife willing to do the work!! When I'm at work, the wife gets home from work, starts spliter up and splits wood while one boy picks wood off ground and puts it on truck tall gate, the other stacks it neat in truck. She sometimes dose 3 truck loads a day with her aunt operating the lever on spliter! Just the opposite, in middle of winter she starts the old 9n ford tractor and brings the wood to house to be put in basement for burning. I am blessed to have a hard working wife and kids!! It's not easy work but it's how we get by.
@@TractorTech here in New Mexico that’s all you see is pine wood for sale nothing else. There is one guy who has oak and wants $550 a cord do you think that’s fair?
Just paid 225 for what turned out to be 2/3 of a cord, if that. I hate the feeling of being ripped off. Trying to find a trustworthy firewood seller is getting tough in these parts
I tell people my wood is cut in 18" lengths but I'm giving them a full cord of firewood!. So when they stack it its 4'x18"x20' or 4'x3'x10', never had any complaints!. Ohio has stipulations on how you can sell firewood but they dont enforce it!. The customer should have a moister meter!.
I much prefer to cut and split my own wood. I've found buying it didn't really save me much time. Often times, the "seasoned" wood would still be green. I'd have to cut quite a bit of it since it was too long to fit in my stove. I'd have to split a lot of it because of how big it was. Something you didn't mention was not getting the type of wood advertised. It's very upsetting to buy oak, but find a lot of pine mixed in. Had one time I don't even know what the wood was. I didn't recognize the bark, but it split easily and burned quickly. Plus, the chord was way short. Never got wood from him again.
It is not any fun trimming wood to leghth if it won't go in your stove. Mxing pine in with oak is pretty low. Ive heard of all likds of horror stories from customers on firewood sellers.
My brother was the most honest guy, he would cut and split wood to his costumers specs. Dry it. The wood was as good as it gets for selling. They still complained. After 25 years selling wood, he stopped doing it cold . Dealing with the public got the best of him!
The public can be difficult to deal with. I know I am selling a quality product. If people complain, they can get their wood elsewhere.
My friends dad was pissed drunk one day and told him to come over he wanted to give him some sage wisdom, thinking it was going to be something for the ages he went over at which point his dad said “most people are idiots”! ... we’ve laughed about it for years because he was a hardcore cynic but as we’ve gotten older we realize he was 110% correct and actually now it’s something I always remind myself off anytime I have to deal with the public and man it really helps cause instead of being disappointed I’m sometimes pleasantly surprised...anyways sounds like your brother found this out himself also
That’s one of the main reasons I stopped selling firewood. Everybody that called me wanted to harp at me about “ the last guy “ they bought wood from, and how he ripped them off. I would ask , “ Have you ever bought from me ? “. They would reply “ uh………..no. “ I would tell them to go call “ the last guy “ and b**ch him out . Then I would hang up on them. I had so many regular customers I ALWAYS ran out of wood , every Fall.
I hate people but I like individuals. I tell them to go fck themselves Don’t buy from me I don’t need their money it’s a passion gig. 🤙🏼
@@TractorTech Awesome and Informative video dude. Thanks for making/uploading it
good video. No stupid music no endless babbling. Straight and to the point. Well done.
Thanks!
Information only and not a production.
Having cut, burned, and sold firewood for 47 years, I can honestly say that I would buy wood from you in a heartbeat! I have seen first-hand some of the s**t some wood sellers try to pawn off as "seasoned." If you put salt and pepper on it, it's "seasoned" right?
Thank you for being so honest and straight forward. May your chains remain sharp all season!
I ended up running out of good dry logs to burn this summer. (have plenty of kindling, just ran out of ready to go big stuff) So had to actually BUY some. I opted to go pick it up, rather than have it delivered as he was local. He had made these nice measured racks for his wood- each held 2 side by side 4'x4' stacks, so both stacks = 1 face cord. (he sells a lot of half face cords to vacationers with lake homes) I saw exactly what I was buying, and we loaded my truck right out of the rack. Got a half face cord of cherry and hickory for a very reasonable price- and it was a fair bit more wood than I'd thought it was. We both ended up happy- him with a wad of bills in his pocket, me with a big pile of cherry and hickory to grill over and drink beer by.
It sounds like you found a good honest firewood seller.
Hickory is one of the best Woods you can get for throwing BTUs cherries about in the middle but not bad you got a good deal. In my opinion I'm no professional or anything.
Waiting for our totalitarian administration in DC to start coming after us next. Stove emissions, stove types, laws against wood dealers, stove sellers. Alot more people have gas kitchen stoves than wood stoves.
Been selling firewood for 8 years now. I’m glad this guy can go through all the hoops to sell a premium product. Around here there is no money selling firewood. I usually barely break even and then complaints on top of it. Buying loads of logs and processing it you get what you get for wood. The bad stuff gets tossed aside but knots protruding and some hollow logs, No biggie. It’s all wood and it all burns. Knotty maple will split into odd chunks, No biggie as long as it’ll fit in the stove they’ll burn it at night. I personally throw it loose in the truck by hand and it gets dumped at the far side. I tell all my customers to get their wood early because it dries better at their house than mine. They stack a few cord up and the wind blows through all summer as they know it’s dry by winter. I have a few big piles of wood outside at my house. The stuff on top is dry but in the middle of the pile doesn’t get much airflow.
It’s not about being dishonest. It’s about offering the best product that is practical and some things just aren’t practical. Like delivering 60 cord of firewood by stacking it all in the back of your truck and then unloading it by hand at the far end and sweeping the bark out with every load.
There were a few tips I wasn't aware of. I'm glad I saw your video. Thanks for sharing it with us. Well done Sir.
This man knows what his customers want. Well done my man.
Thanks Kurt!
this guy does seem like a honest dude. I feel as long as your honest to your customers about what you got whether its green, dry, knotty, or beetle wood (like Ringo or Paul) and charge accordingly. not to big of deal how or what its brought loaded or stacked like when they bring it as long as its the amount i ordered after I stack it at my crib. if not ill try maybe one more time and move on to the next wood dealer. Either way stuff happens like is hard its impossible for me at least to perfect. People need a break sometimes. The benefit of a doubt. Please don't ever judge and label someone right off the bat. People and things are not what they seem most of the until you get to know them.
Nice, when someone tells it like it is 👍👏
Thanks👍
I sell firewood mostly to campers in the summer, I always make sure the moisture content is under 20%. Usually its 15 or under. I toss all the rotten wood in IBC cages and that becomes my bonfire wood for when my friends come over, my firepit is quite large.
Since you are selling wood I bet you have repeat customers! I want to make firepit. It would be a good way for me to get rid of my trash wood.
@@TractorTech I thought you have a wood stove?? That "junk wood" you showed in this video still has plenty of BTUs , just use it in the day time or when you don't need as much heat, like the shoulder season.
I wish I had watched this video before buying firewood. Just about everything you said you wouldn't do my guy did. Much respect to honest people like yourself.
Hi from Portland Oregon
Thanks for doing your video! 🪓🪓🪓
I buy firewood and this guy knows what he's talking about
Wish I could find someone like him were I live.
Morning Roger. Thanks for sharing - some great tips for folks to watch out for. Have a good one!
Thanks, you too!
Well said Roger! I usually bring my moisture meter to deliveries and test a few pieces for the customer to give them some piece of mind!
That is not a bad idea. If nothing else it would not be bad to carry one in the truck in case someone says the wood is not dry, then they could be proved wrong.
Peace of mind.
I totally agree with the ant wood. I find if I split it and ants come out, I throw it in a separate pile. I won’t stack it on my 8’ rack(about 3 days worth of firewood during the coldest days.) It’s drys fast due to the bore holes and rotten wood and it still burns well with the more dense firewood. I find my 2500 sq foot Btu drolet stove drys the wood on the rack as well seeing its only 6’ away from the rack. Great video from a fellow New Englander.
Roger great video lots of good info. So now I guess I need to go clean out the bed of my truck. Take care brother.
Thanks Have a good weekend!
I finally found an honest seller and get what I want-
Hardwood, split larger 6-8", and I prefer green to season two years myself and less expensive - I use two cords a year
Nice video Roger that should really help some folks that are new to buying firewood and maybe help some sellers be accurate in how they sell it. That’s one thing I pride myself in is having a measured amount based on cords or cubic feet.1/3 1/2 full etc
Thanks, I hope it helps some people. Maybe some sellers will see this and step up and do what is right. I'm glad to hear you measure your wood👍
Good information especially if new to using it for heat. 👍🏼👍🏼
Very good advice. I do my own wood from my trees. Good Luck, Rick
Thanks, Rick👍 Have a good weekend!
Thanks for the knowledge we definitely got scammed this year by almost all of the above methods and I live in southern Maine. I'd love to buy wood from honest good sellers like you but it seems they're hard to find.
I'm sorry you got scammed. It can be very difficult to find an honest person selling firewood.
@@TractorTech thank you, I just want to put it out there that I'm a non confrontational type of person. So I haven't/won't be calling to complain or anything. Before I even watched your video I felt like something was wrong. I got so much scraps/saw dust it was piled so high, I had to literally dig out each piece of wood. It took me 2 weeks to stack, 3 hours a day. I also found a huge piece of really heavy metal. I had two hole tarps worth of kindling and many wood that wasn't cut and a lot that won't fit in our wood stove. I account all of this to getting what I paid for and next year I'll definitely pay more for better quality with someone else as I understand that it is a lot of work in preparing the wood. Thank you again!
Great video! Great info. There are alot of scammers out here. It seems like they outnumber the good guys.
Yes, it is difficult to find a reputable firewood seller.
Thanks for the info. First Lady I bought from was honest, said she had cheap wood and premium. Charged $60 for a Rick (8x4) of cheap stuff. Came in clutch during ice storm.
Second dude offered to deliver 2 ricks for me. Pulled up in an F-150 with a short bed. I pulled out an old 2x4 and some t post.. dude only brought less than 1.25 ricks and the my were cut to about 12 inches. I paid him for 1 Rick and let him know what I thought about his business ethics.
Great video man. So many people out here wi zero morals, ripping people off.
Thanks! Unfortunately there are.
I buy wood from local sawmills. The wood half the time looks like blocks or boards that didn't get processed properly. But they usually give more per cord just to clear the yard of wood at a cheaper price. They say it's a cord but usually give an extra 1/4 on top. Since sawmills will scrap out weird looking wood it's good stuff since they don't usually send out bad construction products.
That sounds like a good deal.
That's basically the firewood I sell - slabs and offcuts from my sawmill. I'm not in the firewood business - I'm in the sawmill business and just sell firewood to make better use of the scrap. I also do not sell my firewood as "premium" - always sell it as sawmill offcuts.
Good advice 👍
I season my wood 2 years. I also have wood that doesn't like to give up it's bark till the second year. I don't cut anything green, it's got to be dead. I don't tarp the wood just keep metal roofing on the top to keep air moving through it. Size of wood is always varying on the person. I split mine 6x6 size. Any smaller it would not last the night in my wood burner.
I have enjoyed burning wood because it costs nothing for me. I have 8 acres of timber and always stuff dieing. Enough rantings. I leave comments on videos with good content.
Thanks Timothy. I don't like using tarp for wood either. I think they leak and hold the moisture in. I may try doing some larger splits again for my stove and see how it does.
Great information thanks for a good explanation on how firewood is suppose to be.
Your Welcome!
Hi Tractor Tech - it's Big Rodders in Ireland, a subscriber. Thanks for a very informative video. Over here there is no legislation governing the sale of firewood regarding volume, log size or consistency, species mixing, moisture content etc etc etc. It's a totally free market, perhaps because it represents a very small percentage of heating options used.
Hi Big Rodders. The only law that I am of aware of in my state is wood is supposed to be stacked on a truck or trailer, and sold by the cord. You can't sell a pick up load, but people still do it. Have a good weekend!
Same here. There's no law that regulations on size or length of fire wood. That just the size and length he uses.
I don’t sell firewood as I’m flat out keeping up with my own needs. But it’s amazing how people with stoves know so little about what they burn it’s almost scary.
Yes, it is. Now with the internet, it is very easy to educate yourself.
Good points and I agree. One more thing to mention, lower quality wood. Premium firewood would not include maple, elm, walnut, cherry, pine as different woods give off differing amounts of heat. Those are great woods, but not what I would call premium. Oak, hedge, locust, hickory... those are premium firewood, if you heat with wood. If they just want something to crackle in the fireplace occasionally, sure, anything will do but for heating a home, those others won't do near as good of a job.
hi there good points . many years ago i knew a guy that made a fram or box out of 2 4x8 sheets of plywood in the back of his pickup stacked the wood in between the two 4x8s . he would dump it out after you saw it was full . ask you to step aside so you wouldn't get hurt . then dump it . well it was stacked in the front and back but thrown in in-between the front and back stack then straightened on the top middle to make it looked like it was all stacked . my sister bought it . knew something was funny . so she told me . i had her buy another cord when he got there so did i . she called weight and measures and the police . don't realy know what happened to him . but he never sold wood again john
People come up with al kinds of scams. You did people a favor by reporting him.
I personally like a mix of larger and smaller splits. I'll tolerate some smaller rounds (no more than 6" in diameter). With that said, I'm not trying to cram a woodstove as full as possible. Instead, I'm usually doing a top-down burn in a fireplace and will mix in some smaller pieces with the larger pieces in the lower layers to help those layers catch.
Good advice........ Thanks 👍
Another big thing to do is start thinking about next year's firewood early! Don't wait till heating season is upon you to begin looking. Lots of guys will be out or nearly out of wood by then- at least good DRY wood. That's when you end up getting whatever they have- green; semi-seasoned; less desirable species; or just leftover "whatever I have laying around". And by early, I mean spring time at least!
This gives your guy time to plan ahead, just like with any long-lead-time product. (and firewood is very definitely a long lead time product! Most hardwoods take a year or more to fully dry- oak can take TWO years!) Ordering early can also help with wood that isn't quite dry, as it'll have some time before you need to use it.
Communication is key. There's nothing wrong with selling wood that's not ready to burn yet- as long as that fact is shared with potential buyers. Heck, if you've got the space and don't need the wood NOW, you can often get a better deal on it. It's the last minute "emergency" buyers who are at the mercy of whomever has wood to sell.
And if the wood is for a fireplace, fire pit, campfires, etc; don't bust your wallet buying the high end premium wood, like oak, Hickory, locust, etc. Those woods are considered the best, because they burn long, and put out lots of heat, not because they produce nice bright flames or light easily. You're actually better off buying the "lesser" woods for recreational use- because they burn hot and bright! (just not long) and get going easily. Pine/spruce/cedar/larch also produce very good smelling smoke- that classic campfire smell. Poplar, Aspen and Basswood burn hot and bright- and don't pop and spit sparks like pine does. You can save yourself $$, and get great-for-the-purpose wood, if you don't just go with what "everyone" says is "The Best" wood.
Just a few more points to think about when looking to buy firewood.
Most people don't think ahead. Some people act like the wood will spoil if the have some left over from one year to the next. I've never figured out why it is the sellers responsibly to have dry wood. If I was buying wood, I'd buy a year ahead to be sure I had dry wood.
its important to be honest when selling . ive had many conversations with customers about the wood i have. if they are asking for 3 cords of wood and all i have is 3 cords of not fully seasoned wood ill tell them that . ive sold wood at a discount if its slightly rotten at the edges , as long as the customer knows that up front . in my area if i bought premium log loads to sell id be making 5 dollars an hour .so i have to drive to the woods , fall the trees , buck them up and i cant always be as picky and choosey as id like on the species and premium quality . a lot of people in my area are happy to save a little money if the wood is not fully seasoned or the best hardwood in our area, as long as i tell them what their buying . i will never short the load either .
Thankyou.....one guy delivered 4 cord of yellow birch and must have scooped it up with a loader bucket as I had 13 full garbage cans of gravel and bark chip trash to clean up after. Another guy delivered round wood which I ordered with most of the bigger chunks being 14 inches and the small chunks 16 and s lot of bizarre shaped stuff I could not even split so could not use.....rotten stuff too.
13 garbage cans is crazy! It sounds like the other guy brought you a bunch of tree service trash.
One of those “get what you pay for” deals. I find people appreciate consistent lengths and split sizes. I use an acc-u-mark or a Ming marker as well.
I agree, most of the time it is the guy selling cheap wood doing this stuff.
@@TractorTech my eyeball has ALWAYS BEEN solid unless I choose to avoid knots and cheat it .... I'm a 42 yes old drywaller, now with the eye not getting ass much practice from seeing and blind-screwing off the rock
I'm using a tape now since I'm selling that way I only sell 16" firewood. I admit when you cut only 30+ inch (@ the felling cut) fir it is a bit trickier than small medium because the sheer size of the round makes 16" look VERY short.
So it's nice and easy....doesn't take more than 5 min. With an orange window/bingo marker
@@zacfiroved8069 yeah; I don’t have that ability. 1 foot or 1 mile. Same same! 🤣 I find that the accumark is better for when I’m cutting on wood piles. If you have good access to a log then the Mingo marker is the way to go.
Great video, second year wood burning, definitely fell for “seasoned” wood but not “dry” that’s another thing to think about when buying. Get your terms down right before you buy.
Thanks! I have seen seasoned wood that is not dry. I have seen dry wood that is not seasoned. The term seasoned varies from person to person. I guess if you cut and split a load on March 19 by march 20 it would be seasoned.
@@TractorTech he
Thank you for a most informative video. Lots of great tips. I learned s as great deal. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Also if the split wood is smaller in diameter it will dry faster if the wood is green when it’s being Processed which is good for the seller and the buyer.
In Australia we sell by weight not volume. They sell by volume in New Zealand. The issue in Austraila with our hardwood is although its meant to be dried, often its not at 20% or less so the customer is paying for moisture.
Another thing is customers don't plan ahead and buy wood a year in advance stack it at their place to ensure it's dried out. I used to sell it in a woodyard and we had a guy come in everyday at 5 minutes to closing, buy 2 or 3 pieces ( yes really) and do it again and again. I asked him why not get a tonne delivered. His answer, its easier to take it from the boot of the car and burn straight away, saved having to store it and as he was in a rental he didn't want to leave any wood if he left.
Good honest video mate, well done. A lot of people don't realise how much work there is in cutting and splitting wood.
Log here are sold by weight. I've never figured out how that works with various moisture contents and various species.
The same here. Some people want to get a load and almost use it up, then they want another load. They act like it will spoil if they have any left over for the next year. That story about the guy getting 3 pieces at a time takes the cake.
No people don't have a clue how much work it is to process wood.
I get the logic for the rental. There are townhome style apartments with fireplaces where I live. They don't really have space for storing firewood. You could maintain a small firewood stack at most.
Really good information. Thanks.
Thanks for watching!
Good evening Sir 😊 You mention pretty good tricks 👍😊 Thank you kindly for this very good informative video Sir Cheers !!!
Thanks Dave! Have good weekend!
@@TractorTech 😊👌
Dude is a natural movie star. You can tell he's so relaxed and loose in front of the camera, not tense and looking like a tomcat shitting a tuna can. Nope, not at all. And as a fellow firewood entrepreneur, you can tell he's a natural at the firewood bidness. The way he chucked that piece of seasoned wood like a cat turd that totally disgusted him, was liking watch myself after I've handled the 30,000,000 stick of wood that day. Its uncanny really...
Thanks, I really appreciate that.
I started selling firewood for exactly these reasons. We kept being cheated and I figured that other people were too. Sure enough most of my customers say the same things. I like to give a few extra pieces of firewood with every face cord to be sure customers are satisfied.
You’re a good man . Or woman. You get the point
Thanks for the great information! Very helpful!
You are so welcome!
Cool stuff. I'm in northern Alberta where we don't get many options for variety of trees, but volume works the same. My calculations I'd say around 200 cubic feet loose volume when dumped into a cone, but I suppose if it's split larger the measurement goes up.
The length of the wood also makes a difffernce. The 180 is for 16-18'' wood. Split size probably factors in too.
The smaller your fire wood is split, the less wood you have. The larger split you get more wood. I split my wood so it drys faster. The other thing is. A round will burn longer then split. So after you get a bed of hot coals put a round in your stove. I'm 66 yrs old and have heated my home with wood over 40 yrs.
Smaller splits have more air space, so you get more wood.
@@TractorTech I want more wood not more air space. Larry is correct on this. FYI
Yes sir. I've burned firewood for 48 winters as my only source of heat.
Damp wood sucks.
There's no such thing as too much wood.
Split dry will keep your butt from freezing.
Geat info Roger.. I stack my loads in the truck and I usually clean it out every 3-4 loads.. Aslo when I wright up my Craigslist ads I say what I am using for a truck & trailer combo. than I figure if the buyer has Questions he can google what the truck is or ask.
I have refereed off a few RUclips videos as well over the years just so the buyer is not hearing the info from me..
Thanks Daniel! That is good that you are upfront with the customer about what you are using to haul wood on. There is a website that has the dimensions of most truck beds.
Excellent video bud
Thanks 👍
I don't have much of a need for firewood anymore,but I see what people are doing.One thing that I've heard lately is that sellers are charging by the truck load now,instead of by the cord. A cord of split pine is currently selling for $185+ a cord right now!
$185 sounds like a lot for pine but it takes the same work to turn it into firewood as it does oak.
WOW !!! That is expensive.
@@larrybauman7430 nobody has to buy $185 wood. How do you know how much it cost him to process? Or do you expect everyone to give it away for less than it costs him?
@@johnraman1925 185 is a lot for pine, anyway you look at it. I don't care if you got a gold plated splitter blade your trying to pay for, that's to much for pine
I wonder if it would be good for business to put all of that information condensed on a flyer to give and leave at stores for people. Then you can hire a feller to help and stay ahead of things. Some firewood sellers have huge businesses using several machines and workers. Thanks for sharing honesty.
Some stores have a community billboard, that may a way to pick up some customers. Thanks for the idea! I may also be selling bundles at a country store. I'm thinking someone may ask the store if we sell bulk wood and I may pick up some sales like that. I didn't have any problem getting rid of the wood I had this year. I had someone cal today needing wood, but I am sold out. I am going to try to have more for this 2021-2022. Thanks for watching!
Good video. Well made. Excellent information. 👍🏻
Thank you! 👍
😊thanks, very good video, take care. 😊
It really shouldn't be so hard to get good quality real seasoned firewood. Down here in Louisiana, these slicks don't season anything and will deliver a load of wood so green you can smell it from across your yard!
That is common everywhere.
Just subscribed nice channel and nice to hear these different ways. Here in the Midwest there are A LOT of sellers of wood but not all of them are selling Firewood. have a good day. #slackoutdoors
Thanks for the sub. I like the way you put that, that all are not selling firewood.
Good info brother thank you
Thanks!
I bought 6 cord of tree length supposedly....How can I tell when delivered if it is 6 cord or not?
Looks like channel is growing well! I remember you were stuck at that 4.5k range for a long time.
I was hoping to hit 10k by then end of 2020.
Nice Video Roger, great information. Best Regards from Peoria, IL - Jason
Thanks 👍 Have a good weekend Jason!
People new to buying firewood also need to know the difference between "dry" and "seasoned". Moisture meters are a great investment if you're not familiar with different types of wood and how much they weigh when they're well seasoned.
Also dry wood can be ready to burn and seasoned wood may be wet.
Great tips! Thanks
You are welcome!
I use the marker too. But sometimes it leaves a mark on the wood. I also had a problem with it getting stuck and slraying
Spraying*
Yeah, you have to be ready to spin the wheel if it gets stuck.
Thanks for the knowledge much appreciated!!
Your welcome!
We bought two cords of wood this winter and already ran into two of these problems. 1) hulking pieces that made loading efficiently, and 2) a very large portion of our woof was rotten and had a foamy appearance. It's nice to find someone who has a good example of what to watch for, that example showing the log cross section with only the inner ring worth burning is what 50% of our wood ended up being. Burned through both cords in 6 weeks. Will not be returning to that supplier
My neighbor ordered wood off of someone else because I could not get them wood soon enough. There were splits 8 or 9'' wide. Like your wood, as you described as foamy, he had a a lot of that. That is sap rot. That wood has not BTU value. You put it in the stove and poof it is gone. 3 cords in 6 weeks is a lot. The wood my neighbor got has bug damage too, and he lives in a log cabin.
@@TractorTech bought a half cord from another local place and, while more expensive, is significantly higher quality. 6 hour burn time without trying hard to pack efficiently, little to no sap rot, and manageable size pieces. More than I'd like to spend, but a pleasure to burn
Just buy a couple cords of logs.. (pref oak/birch (or any harder wood where ur from) get a saw and a splitter.. make a couple of afternoons splitting.. in the end its much cheaper.. and who needs premium wood.. xd... like its for burning bro.. not for looking good... Like these are crazy times but 100 bucks a cord for some decent logs aint bad.. or somthing like that.. order big.. have some work.. and ull have fire for long time.. I fit about 15 cords in my little shed.. lasts me 2-3 years..
@@larsvegas1505 where do you buy logs? I've never done this
Awesome! I which I saw this sooner.
Great video 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍
Thank you 👍
Is cotton wood are good firewood. I never buy this kind before.
Not very good for home heating.
Low BTU's
Great video, another thing to consider, is wood being mixed with Pine. Now I don’t have an is stacking Pine for a outside Fire Pit, but careful burning in the house. The build up in the chimney can cause a house fire. If someone does burn Pine, dry it out real good in the sun, over the summer and over a year. You’ll have to clean you chimney a lot, maybe once a month. But if that’s all you have to keep warm, it’s better then freezing, just be careful….
Good point. Poplar is also dangerous. It burn about like pine.
Thank you so much for this video!
You are so welcome!
Thanks! Good information.
Your welcome!
Great video!
Thanks!
Thanks for sharing that Roger!
DC
Thanks for watching DC!
That's way I do my own wood,!! I trust no one. my wife and two 5 year old twin boys and i cut and split and stack the wood. It nice to have a wife willing to do the work!! When I'm at work, the wife gets home from work, starts spliter up and splits wood while one boy picks wood off ground and puts it on truck tall gate, the other stacks it neat in truck. She sometimes dose 3 truck loads a day with her aunt operating the lever on spliter! Just the opposite, in middle of winter she starts the old 9n ford tractor and brings the wood to house to be put in basement for burning. I am blessed to have a hard working wife and kids!! It's not easy work but it's how we get by.
That is great your whole family helps on the firewood. It sounds like you have a good process going.
An easy way to remember 128 cubic feet is a quart (of beer for example), which is a quarter of a gallon, is 32 ounces. 32x4=128.
I had never thought of it that way!
It can have rot and solid both. That is actually very good firewood.
If your fire gets down low it is nice. The rotten part will take off fast and the hard part will burn long.
Id Def buy from him if I needed firewood
Thanks!
Not to mention paying for hardwood and having a third of it actually being pine.
People will try anything. There is a guy here that mixes poplar with is wood. Poplar burns like pine.
@@TractorTech here in New Mexico that’s all you see is pine wood for sale nothing else. There is one guy who has oak and wants $550 a cord do you think that’s fair?
branches and knots are actually more dense then the trunk and therefore better wood then the trunk , dont shy away from a knot .
I don't like branches and knots hanging off of a stick of firewood.
Great video thanks
Glad you enjoyed it
Just paid 225 for what turned out to be 2/3 of a cord, if that. I hate the feeling of being ripped off. Trying to find a trustworthy firewood seller is getting tough in these parts
That stinks. How much were you supposed to get? Will the seller make it right?
I tell people my wood is cut in 18" lengths but I'm giving them a full cord of firewood!. So when they stack it its 4'x18"x20' or 4'x3'x10', never had any complaints!. Ohio has stipulations on how you can sell firewood but they dont enforce it!. The customer should have a moister meter!.
I"ve never heard of any state enforcing firewood laws.
Yes Ohio has stipulations on how firewood is to be sold in Ohio!, but they dont enforce it!. They also have laws on the transportation of firewood !.
Interesting. Thanks...
You're welcome
I much prefer to cut and split my own wood. I've found buying it didn't really save me much time.
Often times, the "seasoned" wood would still be green.
I'd have to cut quite a bit of it since it was too long to fit in my stove.
I'd have to split a lot of it because of how big it was.
Something you didn't mention was not getting the type of wood advertised. It's very upsetting to buy oak, but find a lot of pine mixed in. Had one time I don't even know what the wood was. I didn't recognize the bark, but it split easily and burned quickly. Plus, the chord was way short. Never got wood from him again.
It is not any fun trimming wood to leghth if it won't go in your stove. Mxing pine in with oak is pretty low. Ive heard of all likds of horror stories from customers on firewood sellers.
Honest Abe !
Great info!
Thanks for watching!
I agree more you split it the better it dries
👍
Where are you located
I always sprinkle in wht I call all nighters when I'm splitting my wood.
A little larger piece here and there isn't bad.
We call them going to bed logs around here.
Thank you... 👀😇
You're welcome 😊
thank you!
You're welcome!
I can not find log length in Maine any where
It is hard to find here too.
all of the above plus more im my area
Sadly it is that way everywhere.
Nice video. Just like we do.
Thanks! That is good to hear!
Most people selling wood on craigslist don't even know how to measure a cord.
Most people in general don't know what a cord is.
I wood never had thought someone wood rip me off when buying would
Some people will try anything.
How much do you want for your cat he’s beautiful
I'll sell the cat for a dozen of eggs and a tank of gas.
@@TractorTech How big is your tank lol
As soon as I get my cords of wood, I stack it, he always fix me if it's short
does Oak produce smoke ?
i want the best firewood that doesn't produce smoke
If you have a modern stove, good chimney, dry wood and, burn it properly, oak does not smoke.