I’ve been heating with wood for over 45 years. One big tip to pass on. Get your splitting stump a lot closer to your wood shed, and unload your wood as close as possible. It’s much easier and more efficient that way, rather than carrying and/or throwing the wood. The less handling the better. And I’m 73 1/2 and still processing all my firewood myself. I love all of it! Keep up the good work, from NW MN! Carry on with all possible vigor💪
Awesome! Much appreciate the words of wisdom. I am always refining my system so I'll keep all that in mind. I do love cutting wood by hand though, absolute best work out and you don't even need a gym membership.
We usually bring our splitter next to the tree were cutting, with the ATV wagon on the other side of the splitter.. Count how many times you handle the same piece of wood
Greetings from sweden. Hehe we are competing with u on longest winters. When chopping Wood i always haul them in 3 m lenght. And cut them to size in my woodyard. Have a small woodtrailer. Dont know if u have them in USA but here they are common. Perhaps look upp longwood. U cut and split in 1m secions for when time and need coms just cut rhem.
And should have had more grr er Milton in that wood store floor … You’ll learn (He’s young) Great hard work dude and take this advice from the previous first experienced old timer !!
If I had a daughter, I’d be telling her that this guy is husband material. He’s exactly the kind who will get you through every tribulation you encounter! My husband and I are 74 and 71 respectively and we cut and burn about 5 cords a winter. It’s one of the most satisfying and fun things we do. Greetings all from Manitoba, Canada.
What a wonderful compliment! Thank you very much and congratulations to you and your husband, inspiring to think of cutting wood at that age. Forever young!
Have you thought about getting a Old tyre putting it on LEGS over your cutting platform it should keep all 4 pieces together save bending up and down all day just a thought for you save your back 😮
I have a love hate with the cold. It was -20 this morning and I had to get my plow truck going to get inside to fix an axle U joint. I had to jump start it and it cranked slow. Usually when it snows it isn’t this cold. This is when I hate the cold. When everything is going good it’s beautiful and we comfortably ride snowmachine down to about -10. This is my 44th winter in Alaska and over 30 of them were spent working north of the Arctic Circle. In another year or two we are escaping the winter every year for 3-4 months in some kind of RV.
We lived in UT for nearly 5 years, and I put a wood/coal stove in the family room in the split level ground floor. We sometimes had wintertime lows in the -25 degree range, but the house was very well insulated. In the fall I cut about 3-4 cords of wood (with neighbors) for the covered woodshed and put about 2-3 tons of lump coal in a covered bin. The wood shed and coal bin were just outside the garage wall, so I cut a portal with latching door in the garage wall so we could stock up without even going outside. We had baseboard heating in the house, but only used the bathroom heaters in the morning for showers 5 of us, that stove downstairs kept the house toasty all winter long. It ran on wood all day, and banked it with coal at bedtime. Poked up the fire in the morning and threw on some wood. Ash disposal was twice a week and only took about 15 minutes (we kept it for the flower beds in the spring). Power bills were next to nothing, as we had LP gas water heater and stove, etc.
Heh, heh! Those bathrooms DO get chilly, don't they? At one time I used to fire up a small propane heater to warm things up a bit. But now I tend to wait until I've warmed up the house before bathing.
@@carolynellis387a cord is 4 high by 4 foot deep by 8 foot long. We burn about 5 to 6 cords a year. Of course we're heating a 2800 square foot four bedroom house. 🙏🏻
Love cutting wood, with my husband usually. Just bought him a new woodsplitter, 32 ton... done it by axe for years, enough already with that. Just bought a 160 farm, luckily the house only needs 1 wood stove,way less work than our previous acreage house,which had 2 woodstoves...the temps have been mild here in Alberta,Canada so far but its dipping to the -40's and below next week, with wind chills. So glad im a housewife whom can stay at home to tend to my animals. Good luck Alaska, may 2024 bring you peace and abundance.
I can see the exhaustion in his face. We used to converge on my parents house to help them. 5 chainsaws running. I had the baby one - Husqvarna and couple of Stihls and a bigger Husqvarna. Plus we used a log splitter. We finally learned over the years to take ibuprofen before we went to sleep. 😂
Think about all your accomplishments this spring, summer and fall. You fixed the problem with your roof leaking. Built a platform for your fireplace. Built a new cabin and fire wood shed. Wow! Congrats Mr. Productive!
The firewood shed you built is very sturdy and can hold a lot of firewood. This snow season you won't be afraid of the cold anymore because you have a whole store of firewood You are amazing, congratulations
You have built yourself a wonderful home. It looks very idyllic and cozy and the worries are completely different from those in the "normal world". Good luck!
Having neighbors you get along with, is there when you need them and not there when you want some quiet time is worth so much! Enjoyed this video and subscribed!
A lot of work cutting firewood, I know. Kudos on wearing chaps, always be safe, especially when you're by yourself. You need to save up and purchase a splitter, a whole lot easier and faster. One of my goals when putting up wood for the winter is to try and handle the wood the least amount of times, like you're doing. It saves time and extra work. Now just sit back and enjoy the warm heat from all your efforts.
In the book, Norwegian Wood Chopping, Stacking and Drying Wood The Scandinavian Way, on page 60 under the section labelled Spruce, I quote, "A lot of people enjoy the sparkling and crackling for theatrical glamour it brings to the fireplace, and in the past spruce was traditionally burned in the home on Christmas Eve." I thought about this sentence as you are preparing your spruce supply.
My mom got into antiques and kind of eccentric and I was raised cooking on a wood cooked stove, and all we had for heat was wood and yes, it is a lot of work. But you know when you're busy like that you're sure healthier.
Now that you have enough for this year, start collecting for next season, always have 2-3 seasons on hand. No better feeling knowing you are stock piled.
My Dad and I did that in the 50's with axes, 2 man saw, and splitting wedges on oak, walnut, and hickory. Not much spruce in Missouri where we lived. Cut about as much cause Gandma's cooked with it too. No electricity where we were. I started buckin trees when I was about 7 or 8. loved workin those trees with my dad and gettin the grin and pie from Grandma's and Grandpa'sforthe cutting job. My little brothers had the horrible job of clearing away the cut branches and carrying water. They wanted to cut too, till they got old enough😅.
Here is food for thought! If you go and get a old single mattress burn the cloth off and then when it starts to snow pull it with your four wheeler so wait till their is just enough snow that the wheeler still can pull threw the snow so like four inches or so and make your self a trail around close to some trees and drag it behind the wheeler once you make the trail it can be maintained throughout the winter. but if your getting lets say a foot go drag your trail every three or four inches if you get too much snow you won't be able to pull the drag! This way you will be able to get wood throughout the winter. The trail will get super hard packed! A great little affordable snow machine is a Elan you can pick them up for around 1000.00 and are a great little machine for winter as they can go in powdered snow! I use the drag system behind mine and go get wood threw the winter!
This is my first time viewing your videos. Nice job on your cabins and woodshed. Nice to see twinkle lights too. The cabin looks warm and cozy. Thanks for sharing.
Nice to see someone removing the dead wood fire load from around your cabin. a very wise move and something more people should do, also a dry and mostly seasoned fire would ready for cutting it does not get much better than that.
Very nice work. Having spent many years in snow country with only wood heat, I know how much work it is. I also understand what a rewarding endeavor preparing for winter wood heating can be. There is something very visually appealing about a tightly stacked wood shed packed with fairly uniform splits. Until it's split and stacked it's just wood. After, it's fire wood!
Just a friendly tip from the other end the US, Northern VT…learn how to sharpen your chain saw chain properly. A sharp saw is a safe saw. Softwood trees are the easiest to cut and split. Keep on keeping on👍
When you put your mind to it, you really go for it. Nice construction of your new wood shed. Can’t help but think that after all of that work, you must be incredibly sore.
Hi Matt, tough times in the winter. Whatever one gets used to. I worked in Hibbing MN several times. I net Dylan when I was ten at school. His comment about home was they spent all summer getting ready for winter. I got there 4 th of July, it frosted, I left on Labor Day , it frosted. Hell I was there for two seasons, summer and autumn. In 8 weeks. Same in Fairbanks.
С большим удовольствием смотрю ваше видео! Вы прекрасный мастер! Такой домик! Прекрасные хозяйственные постройки! Удовольствие большое от ваших трудов! Удачи Вам во всех делах и здоровья на долгие годы!
Your dog looks exactly like my dog. It's unbelievable. Same color, size, ears, tail, everything. He even yawns and stretches the same way. I showed my wife, and she almost fell out of her chair. Unreal.
Keep your eye out for a thrown retread (available on roads everywhere). You can put multiple rounds in them and the split wood won't scatter across the yard.
No! A tire has all that side wall and leaves you with just the rim diameter to put wood in. The retread is a wide ring of rubber that lets you stuff more wood into. @@tomlorenzen4062
Yeah I got taught that trick last year by a Canadian girl and I clinched nailed it onto a big stump. Unfortunately my helpful neighbor pulled all the edge nails I crimped the tyre with out of the stump🤦 not realising it was deliberately done to hold the tyre in place to the stump out of strike range of my splitting axe! 😂 But even loose that tyre does a great job and makes hand splitting a whole lot easier
I just only came across your channel today. I love watching the cabins built from the ground up. I'm also enjoying the music. It suits your videos. Especially the banjo. Wish I could play.
Gotta love spruce trees. Takes as much gas to cut off the limbs as buck up the trunk. Nice to have a small cabin that is easy to heat. Here in Central British Columbia, our woodshed has 3 bays, 16x 12 each and we stack the wood 7 feet high. Takes about 12 chord to heat 2 homes of 1000 sq.ft. Use mostly fir firewood to heat as the beetles are attacking it as well. Wood shed looks great.
How good it all looks and whew all the work with firewood, you get the heat several times, You are incredibly diligent and hardworking, really a joy to see and your wife must be proud of you. Your lovely dog accompanies you in everything and watches over you, Dogs are, as you say, our best faithful and loving friend. Now you can keep warm in your harsh winter and hope you have many pleasant moments together in your absolutely incredible surroundings. Christmas is approaching and it's great that you have lights around the house. My son just wrapped up our whole house last week and fenced around the garden plot, It's so cozy in these dark times. Take care and be well everyone. Many hugs from Liv Denmark.😊❤🦮🌲🌲
Just a thought. If your splitting stump is that long and your maul passes through the log quickly your leg or foot will be in jeopardy. You also will get more momentum if it is shorter. Had a close call when mine was too long. Nice wood rack build. I live in Oregon and I’m hankering to split wood now, thanks
Growing up in the 1960's on a farm we always heated our 1836 stone farmhouse with wood burning it in our coal furnace. We always cut wood in the winter because my dad said with the sap being down out of the trees it made the firewood easier to split. No there was no wood splitter, it was a double blade ax for the most part. Locust, ash, elm wild cherry. Crazy thing is we cut live/green trees and dead ones. Dead to start the fire and green because it lasted longer. Yes that is the thing we burned the green wood right away. Amazed we never had a chimney fire. Probably burned wood like that for close to fifty years and never had an issue.
The sooner you get a couple years ahead on the firewood the more enjoyable it is to thow a few extra pieces on the fire... like I just did. Bests from Oregon.
I use a Maasdam rope puller for trees. The length of the rope determines how far it can pull versus 10-20 feet of a steel cable comalong. They are good to carry on a UTV and under the seat of a wide track sled. I have it in a nylon bag with 100’ of rope for the puller and another 100’ of rope. I also have some of those climber nylon slings and some carabiners.
«Жизнь всегда занята и напряжена, но это видео дало мне возможность расслабиться и погрузиться в красоту цветов и музыки. Спасибо за создание такого замечательного произведения искусства».
Lost all my Oak trees via Eastern Oak Wilt... Lost 76 oaks over 4 years... Wilt hit them in April, completely dead by mid September. Wilt moves through the oak tree roots. Nothing can stop it. Crawford County, Michigan 2023.
🎵You can download the music from my channel here ➡www.alaskacabinadventures.com/music
Who lives in the other cabins where you are????
Bigfoot and his family for now
coldest temps in the northern hemisphere were in siberia and around the north pole, not alaska. not even close.
I’ve been heating with wood for over 45 years. One big tip to pass on. Get your splitting stump a lot closer to your wood shed, and unload your wood as close as possible. It’s much easier and more efficient that way, rather than carrying and/or throwing the wood. The less handling the better. And I’m 73 1/2 and still processing all my firewood myself. I love all of it!
Keep up the good work, from NW MN! Carry on with all possible vigor💪
Awesome! Much appreciate the words of wisdom. I am always refining my system so I'll keep all that in mind. I do love cutting wood by hand though, absolute best work out and you don't even need a gym membership.
We usually bring our splitter next to the tree were cutting, with the ATV wagon on the other side of the splitter.. Count how many times you handle the same piece of wood
Greetings from sweden. Hehe we are competing with u on longest winters.
When chopping Wood i always haul them in 3 m lenght. And cut them to size in my woodyard.
Have a small woodtrailer. Dont know if u have them in USA but here they are common.
Perhaps look upp longwood. U cut and split in 1m secions for when time and need coms just cut rhem.
Try a cross-cut saw with a friend. You'll immediately know if they're up for it lol.@@alaskacabinadventures
And should have had more grr er Milton in that wood store floor …
You’ll learn
(He’s young)
Great hard work dude and take this advice from the previous first experienced old timer !!
Nice to have friends who are not afraid of work and are willing to help.
Amen!
If I had a daughter, I’d be telling her that this guy is husband material. He’s exactly the kind who will get you through every tribulation you encounter! My husband and I are 74 and 71 respectively and we cut and burn about 5 cords a winter. It’s one of the most satisfying and fun things we do. Greetings all from Manitoba, Canada.
What a wonderful compliment! Thank you very much and congratulations to you and your husband, inspiring to think of cutting wood at that age. Forever young!
Have you thought about getting a Old tyre putting it on LEGS over your cutting platform it should keep all 4 pieces together save bending up and down all day just a thought for you save your back 😮
Ya my wife says that WE cut and split 5 cords a year. She pushes the button on the splitter sitting down in a chair. 😂
@@stephensherlock5307 You need to get after her for slacking off. 😅
You and hubby are the reason Canadians rock!😍🇨🇦
Having friends pop in who are willing and able to help really sped things up, even if it's just an hour or three...that wood was flying!
Team work makes the dream work. Thank god for good friends.
I know this sounds nuts BUT I’ll take the COLD ANY DAY OVER THE HEAT AND HUMIDITY. Especially here in Texas
I’m in FL and I agree with you whole heartedly!
Same goes for Alabama lol
Agreed. I’d rather die in the cold than live in the heat.
I have a love hate with the cold. It was -20 this morning and I had to get my plow truck going to get inside to fix an axle U joint. I had to jump start it and it cranked slow. Usually when it snows it isn’t this cold. This is when I hate the cold. When everything is going good it’s beautiful and we comfortably ride snowmachine down to about -10. This is my 44th winter in Alaska and over 30 of them were spent working north of the Arctic Circle. In another year or two we are escaping the winter every year for 3-4 months in some kind of RV.
You say that til you live in it daily lol
We lived in UT for nearly 5 years, and I put a wood/coal stove in the family room in the split level ground floor. We sometimes had wintertime lows in the -25 degree range, but the house was very well insulated. In the fall I cut about 3-4 cords of wood (with neighbors) for the covered woodshed and put about 2-3 tons of lump coal in a covered bin. The wood shed and coal bin were just outside the garage wall, so I cut a portal with latching door in the garage wall so we could stock up without even going outside. We had baseboard heating in the house, but only used the bathroom heaters in the morning for showers 5 of us, that stove downstairs kept the house toasty all winter long. It ran on wood all day, and banked it with coal at bedtime. Poked up the fire in the morning and threw on some wood. Ash disposal was twice a week and only took about 15 minutes (we kept it for the flower beds in the spring). Power bills were next to nothing, as we had LP gas water heater and stove, etc.
Amazing! Thanks for sharing!
Didn’t know anyone in the lower 48 used coal. Makes sense, as coal is a great heat source.
Please tell me what a "cord" amount is!
Heh, heh! Those bathrooms DO get chilly, don't they?
At one time I used to fire up a small propane heater to warm things up a bit. But now I tend to wait until I've warmed up the house before bathing.
@@carolynellis387a cord is 4 high by 4 foot deep by 8 foot long. We burn about 5 to 6 cords a year. Of course we're heating a 2800 square foot four bedroom house. 🙏🏻
Love cutting wood, with my husband usually. Just bought him a new woodsplitter, 32 ton... done it by axe for years, enough already with that.
Just bought a 160 farm, luckily the house only needs 1 wood stove,way less work than our previous acreage house,which had 2 woodstoves...the temps have been mild here in Alberta,Canada so far but its dipping to the -40's and below next week, with wind chills.
So glad im a housewife whom can stay at home to tend to my animals.
Good luck Alaska, may 2024 bring you peace and abundance.
I can see the exhaustion in his face. We used to converge on my parents house to help them. 5 chainsaws running. I had the baby one - Husqvarna and couple of Stihls and a bigger Husqvarna. Plus we used a log splitter. We finally learned over the years to take ibuprofen before we went to sleep. 😂
I love the one shots of Norman. He's beautiful to behold!
Watching your videos gets me into a zen mode and remember the importance of living in the present.
That brings me so much joy to hear my videos can do that for someone. Thank you!!
Hard work pays off in the long run. Breakfast in dead winter when its -30C with a warm stove cooking your heat. He will feel it now.
Awww….that great feeling you get when you look at your full woodshed!! Your cabin is so cozy and inviting, what a wonderful feeling!
I'm so jealous. There's nothing like a good day. Working at camp with a great weather like that. No heat, no bugs.
Think about all your accomplishments this spring, summer and fall. You fixed the problem with your roof leaking. Built a platform for your fireplace. Built a new cabin and fire wood shed. Wow! Congrats Mr. Productive!
The firewood shed you built is very sturdy and can hold a lot of firewood. This snow season you won't be afraid of the cold anymore because you have a whole store of firewood
You are amazing, congratulations
Thank you so much, I much appreciate this comment. Take care and thanks for watching!
How big is is your firewood shed?
@@robertwoelk26 He has 2 firewood warehouses, I think the old firewood warehouse is about 12m2 and the new firewood warehouse is about 10m2
@@LyThiHoa1987Smaller? That’s interesting.
@@joeb4142 Maybe it's bigger, I guess.
Looking at the firewood, I felt warm in the whole winter
For some sick & twisted reason I like watching all that work being done in 30 minutes :)
I enjoy so much watching your vids Matt, thank you!
I’m thankful for no singing in the background so much work to do just for heat 😮😮
I am glad you understand the amount of fire wood to last a winter
I like the way you keep your place neat and clean. That’s the way.
New Subscriber - so refreshing to see a clean site. No piles of junk accumulating. Job well done.
I felt that “sigh” by the fire! What a man!!!
Thank you trees. They're amazing aren't they for what they give us!🎋🌲🌳✨✨✨
Man if I could rewind time to back when I was 19 and heading out into the world I’d head to Alaska for this life
You built a beautiful cabin❤ I can’t wait to see the next🎉 Thank You for sharing From Ohio❤
I always envy men who can do this for themselves. Here's hoping you have either a good Dog or a Great Wife! And you got yourself a new subscriber 👌
You have built yourself a wonderful home. It looks very idyllic and cozy and the worries are completely different from those in the "normal world". Good luck!
What a peaceful video. Love your cabin. Great to have a loyal dog with you. Thanks for another video. Stay safe.
That old timer had a long and busy day good job buddy
Lots of hard work….awesome job!!
It's work but when it's cold out
You'll be glad you did it all..
Good job..
Great job Matt, hope family in good health, NORMAN APPROVED, tampa fla😊
loved the shot of Forest playing guitar by the fire
Merci. Miss That Wonderful Life.
Norman is around you because you feed him good and he is always looking for his next meal.
that's what friends are for, lol - I like humor
Like all dogs?
@@SJC49 Class of ‘67, University of Georgia, what do you think?
Having neighbors you get along with, is there when you need them and not there when you want some quiet time is worth so much! Enjoyed this video and subscribed!
A lot of work cutting firewood, I know. Kudos on wearing chaps, always be safe, especially when you're by yourself. You need to save up and purchase a splitter, a whole lot easier and faster. One of my goals when putting up wood for the winter is to try and handle the wood the least amount of times, like you're doing. It saves time and extra work. Now just sit back and enjoy the warm heat from all your efforts.
Awesome looking new wood shed
In the book, Norwegian Wood Chopping, Stacking and Drying Wood The Scandinavian Way, on page 60 under the section labelled Spruce, I quote, "A lot of people enjoy the sparkling and crackling for theatrical glamour it brings to the fireplace, and in the past spruce was traditionally burned in the home on Christmas Eve." I thought about this sentence as you are preparing your spruce supply.
Good video. Many would say not a glamorous life but I think it’s a beautiful life and I would love to have lived one just like this. Great work.
Exactly! Thanks for your comment.
@@alaskacabinadventuresvery nice to see your work and your fantastic life. A fine dok isn't it 👍
Greetings from Germany 🎈
I love a wood fire, the heat, the smell. I have one in my cabin in northern Vt. but not in my house in Ct. where I wish I did have one.
My mom got into antiques and kind of eccentric and I was raised cooking on a wood cooked stove, and all we had for heat was wood and yes, it is a lot of work. But you know when you're busy like that you're sure healthier.
Very nice camerawork and editing, appreciated!
This was so relaxing. Thank you.
Now that you have enough for this year, start collecting for next season, always have 2-3 seasons on hand. No better feeling knowing you are stock piled.
My Dad and I did that in the 50's with axes, 2 man saw, and splitting wedges on oak, walnut, and hickory. Not much spruce in Missouri where we lived. Cut about as much cause Gandma's cooked with it too. No electricity where we were. I started buckin trees when I was about 7 or 8. loved workin those trees with my dad and gettin the grin and pie from Grandma's and Grandpa'sforthe cutting job. My little brothers had the horrible job of clearing away the cut branches and carrying water. They wanted to cut too, till they got old enough😅.
Here is food for thought! If you go and get a old single mattress burn the cloth off and then when it starts to snow pull it with your four wheeler so wait till their is just enough snow that the wheeler still can pull threw the snow so like four inches or so and make your self a trail around close to some trees and drag it behind the wheeler once you make the trail it can be maintained throughout the winter. but if your getting lets say a foot go drag your trail every three or four inches if you get too much snow you won't be able to pull the drag! This way you will be able to get wood throughout the winter. The trail will get super hard packed! A great little affordable snow machine is a Elan you can pick them up for around 1000.00 and are a great little machine for winter as they can go in powdered snow! I use the drag system behind mine and go get wood threw the winter!
I too Shoot Bushcraft you are my teach thank you! 🙏🧡🙏🧡
Literally spent the summertime cutting up logs for the winter 😊
I can't believe there's so much work to do!..but it's all worth it!!.you have accomplished a dream anyone would love to have..💯💯💯🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏👏👏👏👏👏
I would love living like this!!!!
You did well and worked very hard.
Well done Matt great work out as well 😊ready for a cold winter ahead always love watching 👀 👍 my friend 👍 Overland Dave UK 🇬🇧
This is my first time viewing your videos. Nice job on your cabins and woodshed. Nice to see twinkle lights too. The cabin looks warm and cozy. Thanks for sharing.
Nice job on the wood shed! The older I get the more I hate the cold and the heat, to bad it wasn’t 60 degrees all year round ha ha, one can only hope!
Not a bad effort with the wood, and the shed is a fantastic addition to your property.
Nice to see someone removing the dead wood fire load from around your cabin. a very wise move and something more people should do, also a dry and mostly seasoned fire would ready for cutting it does not get much better than that.
Good morning Chuck. Nice to see the tent is still up. Thanks for taking the time to make this entertaining video. Stay safe.
What a beautiful video. The editing, the filming mixed with the perfect music. Just subscribed. A privilege to get to enjoy this.
Very nice work. Having spent many years in snow country with only wood heat, I know how much work it is. I also understand what a rewarding endeavor preparing for winter wood heating can be. There is something very visually appealing about a tightly stacked wood shed packed with fairly uniform splits. Until it's split and stacked it's just wood. After, it's fire wood!
Prob your best edit yet man nice work
Good video! You are a handy man! Btw in Finland spruce is considered one of the worst fire woods. Birch is the best! We dry our wood in 1 year.
Just a friendly tip from the other end the US, Northern VT…learn how to sharpen your chain saw chain properly. A sharp saw is a safe saw. Softwood trees are the easiest to cut and split. Keep on keeping on👍
When you put your mind to it, you really go for it. Nice construction of your new wood shed. Can’t help but think that after all of that work, you must be incredibly sore.
Matt, I love your videos. Great editing. And of course, I love the music. ❤
O interior de sua cabana é muito linda e de bom gosto.... gosto muito de seus vídeos!!!
The shed looks great. You do great work in the woods lol always look forward to your viseos . Keep them coming. Love from Ohio ❤
Hi Matt, tough times in the winter. Whatever one gets used to. I worked in Hibbing MN several times. I net Dylan when I was ten at school. His comment about home was they spent all summer getting ready for winter. I got there 4 th of July, it frosted, I left on Labor Day , it frosted. Hell I was there for two seasons, summer and autumn. In 8 weeks. Same in Fairbanks.
So much better!!Great video!
С большим удовольствием смотрю ваше видео! Вы прекрасный мастер! Такой домик! Прекрасные хозяйственные постройки! Удовольствие большое от ваших трудов! Удачи Вам во всех делах и здоровья на долгие годы!
lots of hard work but heaven on earth is hard work.
Love all things fire wood, felling, cutting, splitting, stacking, burning
Your dog looks exactly like my dog. It's unbelievable. Same color, size, ears, tail, everything. He even yawns and stretches the same way. I showed my wife, and she almost fell out of her chair. Unreal.
A old friend told me when I moved to West Virginia years ago that you never have to much fire wood and I believe that today
Norman..What a great name for a dog..
Quadrunner power! Nice work. More chopping than i could handle.
Bela Cabana! A lenha do Estoque irá garantir o inverno.Belo Trabalho! Parabêns!
Keep your eye out for a thrown retread (available on roads everywhere). You can put multiple rounds in them and the split wood won't scatter across the yard.
Or just a -Tire?
No! A tire has all that side wall and leaves you with just the rim diameter to put wood in. The retread is a wide ring of rubber that lets you stuff more wood into. @@tomlorenzen4062
Yeah I got taught that trick last year by a Canadian girl and I clinched nailed it onto a big stump. Unfortunately my helpful neighbor pulled all the edge nails I crimped the tyre with out of the stump🤦 not realising it was deliberately done to hold the tyre in place to the stump out of strike range of my splitting axe! 😂 But even loose that tyre does a great job and makes hand splitting a whole lot easier
I just only came across your channel today. I love watching the cabins built from the ground up. I'm also enjoying the music. It suits your videos. Especially the banjo. Wish I could play.
Tess is a stunning woman -- I love that she jumped right in to help!!! Steve is a lucky man for sure!! Good Luck with winter
Absolutely!
It's all so beautiful
Thank you very much for the video and thanks your friends, it is always good to have good friends.
Gotta love spruce trees. Takes as much gas to cut off the limbs as buck up the trunk. Nice to have a small cabin that is easy to heat. Here in Central British Columbia, our woodshed has 3 bays, 16x 12 each and we stack the wood 7 feet high. Takes about 12 chord to heat 2 homes of 1000 sq.ft. Use mostly fir firewood to heat as the beetles are attacking it as well. Wood shed looks great.
How good it all looks and whew all the work with firewood, you get the heat several times, You are incredibly diligent and hardworking, really a joy to see and your wife must be proud of you. Your lovely dog accompanies you in everything and watches over you, Dogs are, as you say, our best faithful and loving friend. Now you can keep warm in your harsh winter and hope you have many pleasant moments together in your absolutely incredible surroundings. Christmas is approaching and it's great that you have lights around the house. My son just wrapped up our whole house last week and fenced around the garden plot, It's so cozy in these dark times. Take care and be well everyone. Many hugs from Liv Denmark.😊❤🦮🌲🌲
Thanks for getting back to me
Just a thought. If your splitting stump is that long and your maul passes through the log quickly your leg or foot will be in jeopardy. You also will get more momentum if it is shorter. Had a close call when mine was too long.
Nice wood rack build.
I live in Oregon and I’m hankering to split wood now, thanks
Growing up in the 1960's on a farm we always heated our 1836 stone farmhouse with wood burning it in our coal furnace. We always cut wood in the winter because my dad said with the sap being down out of the trees it made the firewood easier to split. No there was no wood splitter, it was a double blade ax for the most part. Locust, ash, elm wild cherry. Crazy thing is we cut live/green trees and dead ones. Dead to start the fire and green because it lasted longer. Yes that is the thing we burned the green wood right away. Amazed we never had a chimney fire. Probably burned wood like that for close to fifty years and never had an issue.
Nice work, Matt! That new wood shed is a thing of beauty! I love the music in your videos.
Nice vid. Shows the real cost in labor to keep those fires going. A person who preps stays warm for sure
A full woodshed lets you relax a little more. Hard work but you can breathe easier now.
I agree love the cold over the heat lived in upper Midwest all my life!
Good job done mate ..enjoy your vids ..Cheers from Australia ,,
The sooner you get a couple years ahead on the firewood the more enjoyable it is to thow a few extra pieces on the fire... like I just did. Bests from Oregon.
Love your channel
I use a Maasdam rope puller for trees. The length of the rope determines how far it can pull versus 10-20 feet of a steel cable comalong. They are good to carry on a UTV and under the seat of a wide track sled. I have it in a nylon bag with 100’ of rope for the puller and another 100’ of rope. I also have some of those climber nylon slings and some carabiners.
«Жизнь всегда занята и напряжена, но это видео дало мне возможность расслабиться и погрузиться в красоту цветов и музыки. Спасибо за создание такого замечательного произведения искусства».
Thank you so much! So glad your enjoyed it!
Very sad how the spruce are being destroyed in your area. We have that happening with the Hemlock! Not happy about it. Have blessed day all.
Lost all my Oak trees via Eastern Oak Wilt... Lost 76 oaks over 4 years... Wilt hit them in April, completely dead by mid September. Wilt moves through the oak tree roots. Nothing can stop it. Crawford County, Michigan 2023.