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Hubby and I split and stacked most of a cord of wood. Or more. I'm guessing at the amount, and I didn't take pictures.

Hubby does the splitting, I do the stacking. So he does the heavy lifting, and I do the walking. He's feeling it now, I'll probably feel it in the morning.
 
Hubby and I split and stacked most of a cord of wood. Or more. I'm guessing at the amount, and I didn't take pictures.

Hubby does the splitting, I do the stacking. So he does the heavy lifting, and I do the walking. He's feeling it now, I'll probably feel it in the morning.
I know that was a lot of work. 30 years or so ago one winter I and my two young sons that loaded the pickup as I cut the trees up sold about 58 cords of mostly white ash. We were cutting huge trees ahead of the bulldozer that was clearing river bottom land in NW MO. At least it split easy with it mostly straight grain. With the sap down in the trees it would burn well within a week of being cut.
 
Ash is such good firewood! We have mostly oak, some maple, some elm, and some walnut. The last two fight you all the way down when you split them; they're "stringy" is the best way I can describe it.

We have a few hickory, and that is NICE wood too. Very heavy and dense.
 
Ash is such good firewood! We have mostly oak, some maple, some elm, and some walnut. The last two fight you all the way down when you split them; they're "stringy" is the best way I can describe it.

We have a few hickory, and that is NICE wood too. Very heavy and dense.
Hickory makes good smoke for barbecue. Imo
 

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