Editors’ Introductory Note: This post first appeared in the excellent, long-running Rural Revolution blog. We recommend bookmarking it! We also recommend Patrice’s books.
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Until a few days ago, October was a very dry month for us. Thankfully some much-needed and very welcome rain is moving in.
While it’s delightful to walk outside and sniff the fresh moist ground, we weren’t idle during the dry weeks. Among other chores, we focused a lot on firewood, a chief preoccupation for many people this time of year.
Summer before last, we had a neighbor come in with some huge equipment and clear out a lot of dead trees from the wooded side of our property.
He piled the burnable debris in big burn piles and put the salvageable logs in another pile just below our corral.
We’ve been harvesting firewood off that pile ever since. In the last few weeks, Don’s worked hard to cut it all into rounds.
When enough rounds are cut, we load them into a small trailer hitched to the tractor bucket, and bring them up into the driveway to split.
We’ve been repeating this process for several weeks now.
We’re stacking some of the split wood in the barn:
We’re stacking some on the side porch:
And we’re stacking some on the front porch:
We have room to stack lots more in all three locations, especially since we moved the kindling box from the front porch to the side porch…
…giving us more room on the front porch.
We always keep the hatchet in the kindling box for splitting kindling as needed.
Continue reading“Guest Article: Fall Chores, by Patrice Lewis”













