As an added service we are
now offering the supply and delivery of logs.
Price:
Load Delivered £55.00
Load Delivered and Stacked £65.00
To Order Please Call:
01276-509505
Load Size
Each log load size will be the
cargo space of the van pictured below.

Why use firewood?
Firewood is environmentally friendly because using
it results in virtually no 'fossil' carbon dioxide being added
to our present environment and thus helps minimise the effects
of climate change as compared to using gas, oil or coal. Firewood supply can create local, rural jobs and revenue and can
play a major role in reversing rural economic decline. Firewood
is also a renewable resource and using it today will not prevent
our children and grandchildren from using firewood in the
future.
Cutting firewood through thinning and coppicing can re-establish
traditional woodland management. It is a decline in this type of
practice that has led to the loss or decline of some of our most
attractive woodland wildlife.
Seasoning and storing logs
Because trees contain a lot of water, freshly cut logs will
contain around 50% water and are difficult to burn without some
drying or seasoning taking place. Wood felled during one winter
should be seasoned over the following summer and burnt the next
winter when they should have around 33% moisture. If possible,
two years seasoning is best to bring it to 25% moisture content.
Some trees contain naturally less water than others. Freshly
felled ash for example contains only a 33% moisture content
while fresh poplar has a moisture content of sixty six percent.
Academy only supply seasoned logs,
unless you specifically ask for fresh or green wood to season
yourself. Logs are best stored outside but under cover where air
but little rain can get to them. If possible bring your next
weeks supply into the house and store somewhere warm like near
but not next to the fire, stove or boiler.
Burning logs
Some types of tree make better firewood than others. Broadleaved
trees are denser than softwoods such as pines and provide more
heat per similar sized bag or trailer load. In general ash, oak,
beech, birch, sycamore, hornbeam are all first class firewood. All conifers such as pine, plus sweet chestnut, and turkey oak
are liable to throw sparks but can be used if very dry in a
closed wood burning stove or boiler. Alder, willows and poplars
are considered poor firewood due to their high moisture
content.
There is an old poem on firewood which to
some extent holds true.
Beechwood fires are bright and clear
If the logs are kept a year,
Chestnut's only good they say,
If for logs 'tis laid away.
Make a fire of Elder tree,
Death within your house will be;
But ash new or ash old,
Is fit for a queen with crown of gold
Birch and fir logs burn too fast
Blaze up bright and do not last,
It is by the Irish said
Hawthorn bakes the sweetest bread.
Elm wood burns like churchyard mould,
E'en the very flames are cold
But ash green or ash brown
Is fit for a queen with golden crown
Poplar gives a bitter smoke,
Fills your eyes and makes you choke,
Apple wood will scent your room
Pear wood smells like flowers in bloom
Oaken logs, if dry and old
keep away the winter's cold
But ash wet or ash dry
A king shall warm his slippers by.
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