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Live oak wood seasoning time

Posted on 1/9/22 at 11:33 am
Posted by TDsngumbo
Member since Oct 2011
49163 posts
Posted on 1/9/22 at 11:33 am
I have an absolute shite ton of live oak wood I’ve split recently. It’s very wet right now and I plan on burning it next winter. Any tips on how to speed up the seasoning/drying time between now and then. I have a covered area where I keep my firewood, about a foot off the ground, but I’ve never had live oak firewood this fresh before so not sure what drying time to expect.
Posted by FishinTygah84
LA
Member since Dec 2013
2034 posts
Posted on 1/9/22 at 3:16 pm to
Same here. It will be fine next winter if it’s covered and can dry out
Posted by mtcheral
BR
Member since Oct 2008
2082 posts
Posted on 1/9/22 at 5:39 pm to
Should be fine by next year. Just stack it up where it can stay dry.
Posted by windriverwonders
Member since Jan 2022
76 posts
Posted on 1/9/22 at 7:08 pm to
Covered, depending on how big it is split 7-8 month will be good
Posted by TDsngumbo
Member since Oct 2011
49163 posts
Posted on 1/9/22 at 7:48 pm to
Good! I keep reading two years online for live oak and that has me a bit concerned. Sounds like bs to me but then again I’ve never had live oak so I don’t know. I’m used to burning water oak, pecan, and hickory.
Posted by LSUfan20005
Member since Sep 2012
9138 posts
Posted on 1/10/22 at 7:36 am to
If it’s already split that’s the difference - many people “season” by letting the logs sit. If you get a dry spell, uncover if it’s in the sun.
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
71020 posts
Posted on 1/10/22 at 8:13 am to
A year minimum in a wood shed is what I used to go by. Live oak is ultra dense. You can speed the process up a bit various ways, mainly in how you stack it. If you stack it high and tight it'll take longer than if its stacked loose. As counter-intuitive as it is, covered in a woodshed in just a random thrown together pile is about the best you can do for drying speed vs space efficiency.
Posted by Brad84
Member since Jan 2022
6 posts
Posted on 1/31/22 at 9:13 am to
Just put you a couple 4x4's down to stack it on. You want to keep it off the ground and that's about it if you going to wait an entire year. I would leave it out in the rain also because its probably going to be a little too dry with a whole year to dry.
Posted by Stexas
SWLA
Member since May 2013
6844 posts
Posted on 1/31/22 at 9:30 am to
If you can figure out a way to open it up some using some space inside the stack.
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