Despite the pleasant warm weather, it will be autumn soon. This is the time to get ready for cooler weather through autumn and winter. The plants in the garden do that on their own without our help. They somehow seem to know what time it is. We only need to clean up the mess and empty the gutters when deciduous trees start to drop their leaves later. Most of our work involves features that are not plants.

Winters are so mild here that some of our work often gets delayed until it becomes necessary. If needed, we can paint, stain and seal decks, fences, patios and anything else outside anytime the weather allows right through winter. Many of us leave patio furniture outside all year both because the weather is not too harsh on it, and because patios are usable spaces even through winter.

Firewood is also commonly neglected or not even needed, but for different reasons. Many fireplaces were damaged or destroyed by the Loma Prieta Earthquake decades ago, and never repaired or replaced. Modern building codes outlawed the construction of new fireplaces even prior to that; so newer fireplaces are instead pellet stoves. Those of us who still use old fireplaces and stoves have more difficulty obtaining wood now that the orchards are gone and the outskirts of town are so much farther from home.

The advantage of pellet stoves is that fuel (which looks like stove food) is always available so does not need to be accumulated, stored and seasoned. The fuel also burns cleaner. Synthetic logs (made from compressed wood byproducts and fuel) are an expensive alternative for conventional fireplaces and stoves, but also burn cleaner than wood, and are always available. They are lightweight and clean, so can be picked up at the store and brought home in the trunk of a small car whenever a fire is wanted in the fireplace.

Good old fashioned firewood is both more work and stigmatized because of pollution. Those of us who do not have firewood available within our own gardens can purchase it from some tree service companies. It is most commonly obtained already split and seasoned directly from the wood yard where the tree service company stores it. It can be delivered for a price. Some people even like to pay a bit extra to get it  stacked.

Firewood obtained in this manner is typically a mix of random woods from trees found in local landscapes. There is often a preponderance of a particular type of wood. No one ever knows what to expect. The specific type of wood is designated only when a large tree or group of trees needs to be removed, and can be isolated from mixed wood.
Palms and yuccas, known as ‘herbaceous trees’, do not produce effective firewood! A few pieces in a load of firewood should not hurt anything, but palm or yucca ‘wood’ should not be purchased. Mixed wood often contains some resinous wood and eucalyptus, which burns just fine, but produces a bit more soot that needs to be cleaned from chimneys.

Firewood should be obtained annually in quantities that are likely to be used each winter. It is perishable, and can rot if stored several years outside. Even if it does not rot, it can become infested with rodents if it stays idle too long. Besides, excessive firewood simply takes up space that could be used for something else.

2 thoughts on “Firewood Season Begins Before Fireplace Season

  1. Here in New England, if we heat with wood, it’s a different story…I need four to five cords a year. And the wood needs to be seasoned to 15% moisture if it’s to be burned efficiently and without creoste buildup. That moisture level takes a minimum of a year to reach, and can take two for thicker pieces. My main wood shed, built of salvaged lumber, holds six cords in six one-cord bays. Each bay has a place where the fill date is written, so the oldest and best-seasoned material is easy to find. The species are mixed: red and white oaks, red maple, wild cherry, occasional locust, sassafrass, beech, and sometimes softwoods like pitch pine. We will be burning a lot more beech in the next ten years if BLD disease kills off the beeches the way Dutch Elm Disease killed off the elms.

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    1. Firewood should be more acceptable here than it is. I could really get carried away on this topic. The forests here are more combustible now than they are naturally, and more so than they ever have been. There are a few reasons for that, but regardless, we should be more concerned about it than we are. I would rather burn firewood constructively in a fireplace to warm a home than have it burn in a manner that will burn my home down! Since the forests are not allowed to burn naturally (and we do not want them to while we live here), we should manage the vegetation without fire, which involves cutting trees down. Even if we took out all the firewood that we could possilbe use, it would be less than two cords annually. I used only about a cord annually. The weather does not get very cold here.

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