The Outside Story
The Outside Story: Firewood physiology
This
week feels like fall proper. It’s gray, drizzly, 50s; the kind of
weather that makes you realize you’d better batten down the house for
winter.
We’re going to get
to the first fire of the year in a moment, that pathetic, smoldering
pile of hissing wood in your woodstove that you made such a big deal
about. “Come here kids!” for the ceremonial lighting of the hearth,
which turned into the ceremonial opening of the doors and windows to let
the smoke out of the living room. (Write what you know, the English
professors advise.)
But first, let’s talk about the physiology of a tree.
Trees,
like most living things, are full of water. You can imagine a piece of
firewood as a mixed bundle of hollow and solid cardboard tubes. The
hollow tubes are vessel cells that move water. The solid tubes are
fibers that help make wood strong. When a tree is felled, water is
trapped in the hollow cell cavities (called lumens), as well as in the
cell walls. The amount of water per cell is minuscule, but multiply it
by trillions and it really adds up. According to an Extension Service
bulletin, one cord of red oak weighs 4,888 pounds when it’s green and
3,528 pounds when it’s dry. Divide the difference by 8.3 pounds — the
weight of a gallon of water — and we learn that 164 gallons disappears,
per cord, in the evaporation process.
So,
all this water has to migrate out of the wood before it will burn well.
Water moves more easily with the wood’s grain than across the grain, so
the path of least resistance is out the ends of the wood. In other
words, the shorter your pieces, the shorter the trip. Some will
evaporate through the sides, so you can also speed up the process by
splitting each chunk. Bark essentially exists to keep moisture in, so a
piece with four cut faces will dry more quickly than a piece with the
bark still on. And the smaller you split each piece, the easier it will
be for the water to get out.
Now,
you split your wood in the spring, just like you were supposed to, and
the water’s still hissing out the ends of it in your stove in October.
So why didn’t it dry right? Well, the drying process depends on three
things: temperature, turbidity and time. (I’m hearing the “Three T’s” in
the voice of Peter Lammert, a forest-service icon from Maine, from whom
I learned the phrase.)
Obviously,
heat aids drying. The best place to put a wood pile is in the same
full-sun location you’d put a vegetable garden. Stack the wood, don’t
leave it in a volcanic-looking heap, so the sun can touch each piece.
The
importance of turbidity — i.e., air flow — is often overlooked. Best
practice is to stack your firewood so the prevailing wind is
perpendicular and can blast the face of the entire row. A single long
row is going to have better airflow than a block of stacked wood or a
volcano. A tarp or some plastic on the top of a pile to keep rain off is
alright, but do not wrap the pile; you want the wind to blow through
and you want the moisture to be able to get out. If you build a
woodshed, make the walls like a pallet so air can get through.
Unfortunately,
as with all facets of life, the time part is the most difficult to
reckon with. The reality is most people rush their wood. Buying wood in
the fall with the idea you’ll burn it that winter is a rookie move that
won’t end well — anyone with at least one year of wood-burning
experience knows this. But cutting, splitting, stacking in spring, the
way so many of us do it (including me), is still not optimal. In my
experience, green hardwood that’s been split and stacked for six months
will still give you only mediocre fires. By about month nine, the wood
will be decent. By month 12, it’ll finally be where you want it. All of
which is to say we should really be getting a full year ahead. The old
timers with the neatly stacked piles that you never see go down because
they sit the first winter, are the ones who are doing it right.
“The
old-timers with time,” you’re thinking, late for this or that. I hear
you. And so, we do the best we can. If you can fit a few days’ worth of
mediocre fall wood into the living room next to the woodstove, the heat
from the fire will be an effective cheat. If you get lemony looks, point
out to your partner that the drying wood will moisturize the room and
expose the kids to dust and microbes so they won’t grow up soft and
asthmatic like the poor buggers in neat-freak urban homes.
Dave
Mance III is the editor of Northern Woodlands. The Outside Story is
assigned and edited by Northern Woodlands magazine
(www.northernwoodlands.org) and sponsored by the Wellborn Ecology Fund
of New Hampshire Charitable Foundation (wellborn@nhcf.org). Illustration
drawn by Adelaide Tyrol.
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