Hi Woodlander
I managed to get a nice piece of belt from a private seller on ebay. Those Mconnell benches are great, especially the ones with triple V belt drive. Is your Zetor 4wd?
We like photos!
John
You did well getting a belt John I'll keep a look at on Ebay, tempted to convert mine to V belt. My zetor is a 7045 4 wd dont recognise yours with the twin wheels all round. That palax you have has it got the screw type splitter? I had a screw splitter it was a bit keen and getting stuck in the wood especially on big rings .I'm after a tractor winch let me know if you hear of any. Woodlander
We use a scandinavian method of stacking firewood, where the wood is stacked in a circle with the top logs used like tiles to make the water run off the stack. Traditionally you are supposed to use sticks as the base, but we use pallets. It works quite well and looks better than the temporary woodsheds we used before. There is a picture on the "About" page of our website www.bulworthyproject.org.uk .
We are just getting our act together on this. We dry for 2 years, so have only just started using our first coppice cut. We have stacked in the open, with a tarp on after the first year, with a small proportion of wood in an old goat shed that is falling down. We use a hydraulic log splitter on our Massey Ferguson tractor, and it is absolutely brilliant for personal use. We have planning permission to replace the existing goat shed with a larger log drying shed but so far too busy to put one up. However this will use a pallet base, have walls that don't extend all the way to the floor, leaving a gap for air circulation, an open front (with spiky gates to stop the scrotes nicking the wood) and should be able to take all our coppice wood, rather than some as at present. That said, our 2 year old cut is showing well under 20% moisture despite sub-optimal drying.
We have a tractor because our wood is part of a wildlife site, and hence we need the tractor for other duties including meadow mowing, but it is also great for lugging logs around using lifting slings.
birchbark wrote:Dear all- I am aware that this thread is old but a looks like a good place to start !! I've just joined after moving into a house with 1/2 acre of birch coppice with standards and although enthusiastic about managing the area I'm pretty clueless as where to find the basics- I was wondering if any of you could recommend some beginners resources ?? I'd be very grateful. many thanks.
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