It may now be summer but it’s time to think ahead to those cold weather months. It has been said that in Maine there are only two seasons: winter, and getting ready for winter. Winter is beautiful in Maine with the white snow, blue sky, and evergreens. Winter is also dreaded by most people but a little preparation can go a long way in making it easier. It’s also a great time to get outside and enjoy the crisp, clean air (as snot freezes to the side of your face). Its soooo tempting to just forget about winter and head out on the lake in a kayak or just go play. Time flies by so quickly, especially in the warmer months. All work and no play equals no fun so a balance of time is needed. It’s important to find times to share with family and friends, no matter the season of the year.
As soon as the ground is bare and mud season is over, mid-May, time to get the firewood delivered. It is said that wood heats you three times, when you cut it, when you stack it, and when you burn it. We are not physically able to go out and cut down trees and then re-cut them into smaller pieces. We leave that for the young people. We have been purchasing our wood from the same family for years, usually 2-3 cords a year. We always have several years’ worth of wood under cover and ready to go. The wood is dumped into a large pile of 18-inch pieces. It takes up a good amount of space. Now the pile needs to be stacked on pallets to dry during those nice, hot summer days. We lay out pallets and start stacking, 2 pieces facing one direction, then next 2 pieces in the opposite direction, until we have a nice stack about 5 feet high. This whole process is repeated over and over again until the big wood pile is now a bunch of nice, even stacks on pallets.
As my husband and I are middle-aged, we have to do this stacking in stages. Early in the morning is best as the mosquitoes aren’t flying until the magic temperature is reached then it’s unbearable. It seems like for every piece of wood we stack, 2 more pieces take its place on the ground. It’s important that your stacks are stable and this is done by trying to match the size of the pieces you are stacking. A great sigh of relief is in order when this task is complete. After 2-to-3 months of drying and cracks are on both ends of the wood, it’s now time to re stack the wood in the garage. For whatever reason, that task seems to go faster.Continue reading“Getting Ready For Winter in a Northern Climate, by Hollyberry”