JeremyinCzechRep wrote:What do you wear when you're sawing/chopping?
When I started today, I was wearing thermal underwear (top and bottom), trousers, cotton shirt, sweater, overtrousers, scarf, heavy jacket, woollen stocking cap, heavy leather gauntlets, three pairs of socks, and heavy boots. (It was -10C at the time.)
By the time I finished, I was down to underwear, trousers, boots and gauntlets.
But I do use a crosscut saw, a brush saw, a felling axe, a limbing axe, steel wedges and a sledgehammer. An hour's work sees me far more toasty than the equivalent time spent in front of a blazing fire.
I start with an eight-feet long, 10-14 inch diameter log, felled with axe and saw, then limbed, and cut into lengths with the crosscut saw. They're eight-feet long as that's the length of 14-inch log I can carry on my shoulder.
When the logs have seasoned—a year or two—I take one and drive a wedge into one end. As the split opens I drive in more wedges along the log until it splits in two. Each half is split again.
The split logs are cut down to size with the brush saw, which is faster and easier to use on this diameter than the crosscut saw.
I much prefer working like this to using a chain saw. I find you use less firewood when it takes so much effort to produce it.
Also, the sound and smell of hand cutting logs is much better than that of a chainsaw, and I get a real feeling of "I did it", instead of "the chainsaw did it".
But then I am nuts.