Friday and Saturday were both good days in the woods. On Friday I had a friend, Jodie, come to help and get some practical woodland experience - we finished filling the the rack on the right in the photo below, then built and started filling the one behind and to the left:
Saturday involved some better-sized stems than those I'd been felling a couple of weeks ago, so there was some splitting to do. I love splitting Sweet Chestnut - there's not many types of wood that you can hit with a maul and do this:
A couple of steel wedges finish the job:
Splitting the wood prior to stacking does slow down the coppicing, but it gets the wood drying quicker and saves so much time at the other end of the firewood production process that it's worth it. The logs that are too small to split are 'striped' with the chainsaw, just to break the bark and let the moisture out quicker - very easy to do whilst snedding the branches just after felling.
I also tried a bit of chainsaw sculpture, making what could be an ornamental planter to put flowers in on a patio:
Definitely an experimental prototype though, I overshot with the plunge cuts and came through the bottom! I think it'll need a bigger log to work properly...
By the end of Saturday I'd got a rack half full of split or striped logs:
Monday brought a nice sunny day, but I knew rain showers were on the way in the afternoon and that I had some jobs to do at home, so I got there early and fired up the chainsaw at 7:45am! By 1pm the rack of logs was full:
So that's two full now:
I also saved a nice straight 4m log that could be useful for building a raft for Rye Raft Race next summer... Tracy and I are both community first responders, and our local group, Rother Responders, is planning to enter the race in 2014!
I've actually managed to plan ahead this time as well, and have a pile of stakes ready for the next log rack:
As promised by the weather forecast, the showers did come, and I then saw the strange sight of steaming logs when the sun came back out:
Here's a couple of shots of the area I've been coppicing:
It's a surprisingly small area for the volume of wood it's yielded so far! I've even left a few chestnut stems standing to grow on and become larger trees!
That's all for now, next update in a week or so I hope...
Mike
Find about what we're up to in Rye, East Sussex, and what's going on in our wood, Chestnut Coppice.
Tuesday 17 September 2013
Tuesday 3 September 2013
Coppicing in the sunshine
I had a nice spot for lunch yesterday:
One of the advantages of the current dry weather is that we can park the car right next to where we're working, so everything's at hand and I can also sit on the back of the car when taking a break...
The coppicing work progressed steadily yesterday, still with a fair number of small stems, but some bigger ones in there too.
The area we've cut has extended round the side of the large brash pile now - we're avoiding burning brash where possible this year, to leave more for the wildlife and also save a bit of time. But it's only possible when there's a convenient place to dump it.
As a result of the larger stems I cut yesterday, the log stack has rapidly filled up:
That's about a quarter of the minimum we need to cut for our own winter heating use in 2015/16 done already! I also found a few potential sections my Dad could use for making walking sticks, so they're safely stored until his next visit:
Looking forward to my next visit, when I'll probably need to build another log rack...
Mike
One of the advantages of the current dry weather is that we can park the car right next to where we're working, so everything's at hand and I can also sit on the back of the car when taking a break...
The coppicing work progressed steadily yesterday, still with a fair number of small stems, but some bigger ones in there too.
The area we've cut has extended round the side of the large brash pile now - we're avoiding burning brash where possible this year, to leave more for the wildlife and also save a bit of time. But it's only possible when there's a convenient place to dump it.
As a result of the larger stems I cut yesterday, the log stack has rapidly filled up:
That's about a quarter of the minimum we need to cut for our own winter heating use in 2015/16 done already! I also found a few potential sections my Dad could use for making walking sticks, so they're safely stored until his next visit:
Looking forward to my next visit, when I'll probably need to build another log rack...
Mike
Sunday 1 September 2013
Early start to coppicing
We've made an early start to our coppicing for 2013/14, due to when I'm free to work in the woods over the autumn and winter. Starting cutting a little earlier than usual doesn't make much difference the trees, but they'll have a slightly higher water content. But with two years to season I'm not worried about that.
We're working in an area in Sweep Wood, coppicing a wedge-shaped piece of land that includes a route used in the past for timber extraction, barely visible in the centre of this photo:
We got stuck into the cutting, though there were a lot of smaller trees to clear first - these take nearly as much time as the larger trees but don't yield much wood...
After a few hours we'd made a reasonable start, including constructing a rack to store the logs in until next summer:
Not many logs in the rack yet, but it's a start...
I also discovered a rhododendron I thought I'd killed some years ago had recovered, so I made short work of it and pulled up more of the roots this time. I won't be surprised to see it back again though....
Looking forward to getting some more working days in there while the weather is still nice!
Mike
We're working in an area in Sweep Wood, coppicing a wedge-shaped piece of land that includes a route used in the past for timber extraction, barely visible in the centre of this photo:
We got stuck into the cutting, though there were a lot of smaller trees to clear first - these take nearly as much time as the larger trees but don't yield much wood...
After a few hours we'd made a reasonable start, including constructing a rack to store the logs in until next summer:
Not many logs in the rack yet, but it's a start...
I also discovered a rhododendron I thought I'd killed some years ago had recovered, so I made short work of it and pulled up more of the roots this time. I won't be surprised to see it back again though....
Looking forward to getting some more working days in there while the weather is still nice!
Mike