Skip to Navigation Skip to Content
Decorative woodsy background

Site Discussions

Kevin Beattie
Jul 02, 2011

I would add only one thing to the discussion.  I’m a strong advocate of drying wood for 2 years (maybe 1 and 1/2 with some species).  All the problems of creasote, chimney fires, and chimney cleaning costs are pretty much eliminated that way, plus I believe that you retain more BTU’s that way.  Wood that is not completely dry uses some of it’s own BTU’s to cook off the remaining moisture.  In my experience one year old wood just doesn’t perform as well.

From "Managing Your Woodpile" »

Mark Hutchins
Jul 01, 2011

I pretty much agree with most of comments.  Beech is wonderful firewood, although some of it can be tough to split.  With a wood splitter, it makes no difference.  Equal to rock maple I would think.  While green elm is everything you said, if it’s standing dead for a few years before it’s cut, you’ll find it’s a different wood indeed.  I once heated my house for the better part of a winter with a 4’ diameter elm that had been standing dead for a number of years.  I split all of it by hand and almost all it split well, some as good as ash.  My vote for worthless firewood is basswood.  You can sink a maul 1/2 way up the head without even starting a crack.  And it’s lighter than pine or poplar, I’m sure.

From "Managing Your Woodpile" »

Emily Rowe
Jul 01, 2011

Hi Mary, we don’t see any reason not to eat them! They will probably be delicious!

From "Mud Bug Trouble" »

gail
Jul 01, 2011

Could you confirm that we are sending fuel oil to “Venezuela”?
I thought it was just the opposite: Chavez sent oil to the U.S. free of charge for use in low income housing units.  At least I saw an ad on tv about it. If it’s true, it certainly wasn’t widely publicized.
thanks.  nice article.

From "Managing Your Woodpile" »

Kathleen Osgood
Jul 01, 2011

Believe it or not, I don’t mind a bit of poplar in my stovewood mix. It dries easily, splits nicely, stacks beautifully, and ignites quickly. It ain’t warm, but it’s bright, and I’ve got it by the wagonload.

From "Managing Your Woodpile" »

Lissa Stark
Jul 01, 2011

I absolutely agree about the Elm - I had the same thing happen to me…I wondered if there was something wrong with the maul, but unfortunately, there was not.  Didn’t seem worth the effort.

From "Managing Your Woodpile" »

Syd Lea
Jul 01, 2011

I cut hornbeam rounds—up to 4 or 5 inches across, and sometimes even more—in June, then burn them when the cold weather comes.  They would probably be better if I let them sit a year (I can’t imagine they need a whole 1 1/2), but they do fine as I use them.  Last winter I used almost nothing but.

From "Managing Your Woodpile" »

Mary Kelly
Jun 30, 2011

I was fishing lastnight with my children and boyfriend on the Missisquoi River her in Vermont and I was looking for frogs along the bank while my boyfriend was fishing and I spotted a crawfish and caught it. The kids were thrilled and wanted to keep it as a pet. I got curious and started checking along the entire bank with a flashlight and spotted them everywhere so I grabbed a bucket and gloves and caught about 50 in three hours. My boyfriend used a couple for bait and caught two huge fish right off the bat. The biggest fish I have seen in cauht in the river in my 30 years of life. Anyways after the night was over we packed up and I brought the crawfish home and put them in my kitchen sink for my children. This morning my oldest children got the idea to have me cook them and eat them so I did. I am just wondering if it is actually alright to eat them from the river? I know people eat them all the time in the bayou in Louisianna, but this is Vermont. Are they the same kinda crawfish or are they differant? I am just afraid my children and myself are going to get sick. Maybe I worry too much, but I would rather be safe and sure than have my children and myself in the hospital from eating the wrong food.

From "Mud Bug Trouble" »

Donna
Jun 30, 2011

I am heartbroken over this.  I’ve noticed this year for the first time, the absence of the wood thrush’s song.  They are here - I’ve seen them.  But they aren’t singing.  They are doing their little chuck chuck noise and that’s about it.  Something is wrong.

From "The Disappearing Wood Thrush" »

Chuck Wooster
Jun 28, 2011

Hi Ron—

I think the answer to your question is that the current use program in Vermont, especially as it was originally conceived, is a jobs program more than a land-access program. The idea is to make sure that land is available for forestry and agriculture and all the people those industries employ. Perhaps because land posting was much less pervasive a quarter century ago when the program was designed, it wasn’t directly addressed by current use.

From "Debunking Misinformation About Vermont's Current Use Program" »

Connie Ghosh
Jun 27, 2011

Dave, thanks for the link.  But your response helps prove my point.  Nobody, it seems, is tackling what could be paradigm-changing task:  Bringing the native habitat back to some of the places from which it has been eradicated.  i want to make that the goal of my life.  Wish me luck!  Lots of it.

From "Got Fern? Controlling Native Invasive Plants" »

Ron Chase
Jun 27, 2011

Why should people in current use be allowed to post the land?

From "Debunking Misinformation About Vermont's Current Use Program" »

Jeff
Jun 27, 2011

Does the weight / size affect this ?
A 3ft lean, but a 40” diameter 50 ft (a lot of weight), would there be enough strength for one to move this weight with wedges ?

From "Felling Trees Against the Lean" »

David Sementilli
Jun 25, 2011

did anyone get back to Bill Smith re: question on the Barnard, Vt. catamount?

From "Some Suspects in On-Going Catamount Investigation" »

Stephen O. Wilson
Jun 22, 2011

A excellent summary of Tom’s book (which I have, and have read).  Succinct, interesting and for me, a beekeeper, useful and meaningful.

Thank you,

Stephen

From "Honeybee House Hunting" »

James
Jun 22, 2011

Had one enter my bedroom somehow and kept it in my handy dandy *bugzooka* for a few days, after identifying it as definately NOT a ALB let it go to freedom on day 3, unfortunately HE took off too quickly to capture a good photo. I have been living here my whole life and this is the first I’ve ever seen, good or bad sign?? 26yrs old. Sighting June 19th, 2011

From "Whitespotted Sawyer" »

Frank Olio
Jun 20, 2011

I think it would be better to extend the rifle season a little longer being that bow and arrow has 31 days with both seasons where rifle has fifteen days not counting the eight for muzzle loader season. If rifle was given seven more days letting four be either sex days for the last four days this would cut down on the deer heard a lot more.

From "Proposed Changes to VT's Deer Season" »

George
Jun 20, 2011

We have a pond out in a open field. But if we had woods I would of loved to build one out in the woods. Love the photos

From "A Pond in the Woods" »

Peter Forster
Jun 15, 2011

I have a tree in my garden which I have always taken to be a white oak. Being from Windhoek in Namibia this is a highly unusual tree for our environment, indeed I am not actually aware of any other in Windhoek at all. Over the last few years it has been very noticeable that, although all the leaves turn brown in autumn (May/June here being in the southern hemisphere fewer and fewer are actually shed. With new growth in spring the old brown leaves stay on the tree and appear to interfere with new growth. Apart from being unaesthetic these areas of dead leaves harbor pests such as aphids and scale insects which afflict the tree during summer. Each year this has become worse. The winters here are generally mild with few nights of frost whilst the peak summer temperatures are up to 40 centigrade. Rainfall is also primarily late summer with little or no precipitation in the winter, certainly no snow. Last year I manually removed the dead leaves in late winter, which took some effort, but which the tree seemed to appreciate based on the strength of the new growth. I’d be interested to know whether the failure to shed the old leaves when the new leaves grow is a problem or just part of a natural process? Might it perhaps be caused by our climate? I have inquired from local nurseries but have not received any helpful comment due, I think, to the general rarity of the tree here.

From "Why Do Some Leaves Persist On Beech and Oak Trees Well Into Winter?" »

dave
Jun 14, 2011

I don’t know of any urban area where asphalt is being removed and native forest allowed to return. It’s happening in rural areas all the time, though, as farm fields are reverting back to woods. Check out this article if you’re interested:
http://northernwoodlands.org/articles/article/what_is_a_climax_forest/

From "Got Fern? Controlling Native Invasive Plants" »