4 May 2010

TAMS taking chainsaws to the widowmakers

| johnboy
Join the conversation
8

The Canberra Times brings word that the Department of Territory and Municipal Services is kicking off another round of felling dangerous street trees.

Apparently the majority of the 1,719 trees marked for oblivion are eucalypts.

What happens to the firewood?

Join the conversation

8
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

p1 said :

I wouldn’t be burning green wood, it clogs your chimney, leads to house fires and burns much cooler (so you need to burn more).

Yes, but it is easier to cut, and if you stack it for a year it stops being green…

Pretty much what we do. Any wood I find lying around gets stacked for a year before burning. Sometimes 2 years.

p1 said :

I wouldn’t be burning green wood, it clogs your chimney, leads to house fires and burns much cooler (so you need to burn more).

Yes, but it is easier to cut, and if you stack it for a year it stops being green…

Exactly. As a kid, my old man used to get our firewood delivered every Autumn, and then spend Autumn and winter cutting and stcking next years firewood in the garden shed, and we’d burn last years stuff that had sat inside drying for 12 months.

I wouldn’t be burning green wood, it clogs your chimney, leads to house fires and burns much cooler (so you need to burn more).

Yes, but it is easier to cut, and if you stack it for a year it stops being green…

ConanOfCooma1:06 pm 05 May 10

I wouldn’t be burning green wood, it clogs your chimney, leads to house fires and burns much cooler (so you need to burn more).

You also need the chimney cleaned more often.

By the time they came to finish the job everything but the thickest trunks had been ‘removed’….

From what I have seen this appears to be a deliberate strategy. Weirdly for something involving the government, it actually makes a lot of sense.

Couple of years ago TAMS chopped down a number of trees in a park opposite us and left them there for a couple of weeks. By the time they came to finish the job everything but the thickest trunks had been ‘removed’ and stacked away down the side of several houses in the area. I took my trailer over to gather some of the large logs to chop up at my leisure. Certainly made their job quicker.

p1 said :

Most of the wood is chipped on site, and the larger logs are put on a truck and taken to one of the ACT Government’s log yards.

I know where Im going to get my firewood next season…

What happens to the firewood?

Most of the wood is chipped on site, and the larger logs are put on a truck and taken to one of the ACT Government’s log yards. After that? I think they eventually chip them too…

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Riotact stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.