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Author Topic: Firewood prices  (Read 17880 times)

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Offline Frickman

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Firewood prices
« on: November 12, 2007, 08:24:18 pm »
A while back, maybe a couple years or so, there was a discussion here about firewood prices. I remember someone, I think it was Ron W., say that a cord of firewood should be priced about the same as one hundred gallons of heating oil. I might be twisting the facts a little, but it was along these lines. If it was priced more than that, the customer is better off just buying oil.

I bring this up because my local competition is selling firewood for $120.00 to $140.00 / cord, dry oak and cherry. Heating oil is up around $3.00 / gallon. I can't understand why my competition doesn't raise their prices some. If nothing else, their expenses for making it have gone up. This is forcing me to keep my price low. I'm only selling downfall we generate around the mill, I'm not really in the firewood business in a big way. I would still like to make a couple of bucks at it. Have any of you been able to raise your price this year?
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Offline Furby

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #1 on: November 12, 2007, 08:26:40 pm »
I'd just keep your price up and wait for the others to run out. ;)
You should be able to sell for your price a bit later in the season! :)

Offline bull

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #2 on: November 12, 2007, 09:05:17 pm »
keep your price up... maybe you can educate your competion.... I am selling at $250.00, haven't seen $ 140 in over 5 years,,,,,, 1 cord equals 100 gallons of #2 fuel oil which just hit 3.05 on friday and is still climbing....   most likley will stay at $250.00,,, wood is all ready to go, my cost of goods hasn't gone up.... May need a delivery charge ( fuel surcharge) if gas prices continue to climb...

Offline Warbird

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #3 on: November 12, 2007, 09:08:34 pm »
$250.00 per cord?  Is that slab wood or split wood that wasn't good enough to mill?

Offline Dave Shepard

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #4 on: November 12, 2007, 09:15:21 pm »
Firewood around here is over $200, sometimes much more. I can't see how anyone can make a go of it at $120-$140. That was prices from at least five years ago, when fuel was cheaper.


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Offline Frickman

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #5 on: November 12, 2007, 09:57:04 pm »
Yesterday's Sunday paper had a number of ads for $120.00 to $140.00, DELIVERED AND STACKED. I can't see how they do it. And not all these sellers are fly-by-night outfits trying to make beer money. Down along the highway is a fruit market that brought in cherry poles, cut and split them on site, and are selling it for $60.00 / truckload. That's about 1/2 cord. A good, good friend of mine, the owner of a big sawmill, put in a firewood processor last winter. He is selling it picked up at his yard for $40.00 / truckload. That's about $80.00 / cord for mixed hardwoods. If you bring a dump truck the high lift will load you. If you have a pickup you can load it by hand.

If I had the room I would go buy some and stockpile it. As it is I don't have alot of space right at the mill, so I like to keep things moving. I have plenty of room around the farm, but it entails more handling. Of course, for a couple hundred a cord maybe I can throw firewood around a little.  ;)

I sell it by the box, a half-cord box if you measured it. It makes a full-size pickup load. If you have a Ranger, like I do, you make a second trip. I don't guarantee a half-cord, as it is thrown in loose. I hump it up a little though to give you a good deal. I have a box of cutup slabwood, 16" long, mostly tulip poplar, with a little maple, sitting there at $25.00. It's been siting there for two weeks. It was green, and it's poplar, but it's only $25.00. I can't sell it. The boxes of cut and split are $50.00. It can be from six to sixteen inches long, any species, including tulip poplar, green or dry, I throw it in, and I only sell a box a week if that. It's just a way to clean up the yard every Saturday, I'm not going out of my way to make firewood. Maybe I should just raise the price and hold on to it until the snow gets deep.



If you're not broke down once in a while, you're not working hard enough

I'm not a hillbilly. I'm an "Appalachian American"

Conventional hand-felling logging operation with cable skidder and forwarder, Frick 01 handset sawmill

Pretend farmer when I have the time

Offline Ron Wenrich

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #6 on: November 12, 2007, 10:56:45 pm »
The trade offs we used as a rule of thumb was 1 cord of wood equals 100 gallons of heating oil or 1 ton of coal.  What's coal going for in your area? 

Other factors to consider is that a lot of people have turned to pellets.  Pellets sell for about $250/ton and are a lot handier than having a pile of wood.  That also means a few less stoves.

But, the prices you see advertised are for guys working for beer money.  They have about 10 loads of wood, and they sell it and are out of the market.  But, that price is etched into every wood buyers brain and is hard to break.  If its much higher, they just won't buy.  I've been seeing $130-150 in my area.  $250/cord is just out of sight.  Coal would overtake the market.

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Offline solodan

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #7 on: November 12, 2007, 11:11:23 pm »
$200-$250 pine and cedar  $300 oak.

Online DouginUtah

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #8 on: November 12, 2007, 11:35:13 pm »

It's been almost two years since I uploaded my Excel spreadsheet to the forum.

You should be able to find it by searching for -  Comparisons_BTU.xls .

Plug in the current prices and you will see how many BTUs your dollar buys today.
-Doug
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Online DouginUtah

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #9 on: November 12, 2007, 11:59:08 pm »

Well, I just discovered that files that are uploaded do not show up in a Search.  :(
Or maybe I just don't know how to do it.  ;)
So, I went to the message where I posted it.

http://www.forestryforum.com/board/index.php?topic=14883.msg213254#msg213254

-Doug
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Offline Gary_C

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #10 on: November 13, 2007, 12:21:48 am »
According to the Forest Products Lab's calculator, a cord of seasoned firewood is equivalent to 133 gallons of #2 fuel oil. So that cord of wood would be worth $400 with fuel oil at $3 per gallon.

However the problem with using these numbers is a cord of seasoned wood can range from 33.5 million BTU's per cord for Osage Orange to 14 million BTU's per cord for Basswood. Plus there can be a 2 to 1 difference in net BTU's for green vs. air dried wood. So with fuel oil at $3 per gallon, a cord of wood could be worth from $140 for green basswood to $673 for seasoned Osage Orange.

Seasoned Red Oak should contain 24.4 million BTU's per cord and with a burning efficiency of 77 %, it should be worth $490 per cord with fuel oil at $3 per gallon.

So if a customer says the guy down the road is selling firewood cheaper, you can just say that he surely must know what his wood is worth.  :D
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Offline RSteiner

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #11 on: November 13, 2007, 07:19:29 am »
Here in southwestern New Hampshire firewood is running just over $200.00 a full cord of mixed hardwood.  One of the largest wood dealers is offering kiln dried firewood for $225.00 a cord delievered in 3 cord loads within 15 miles of their operation.

In the eastern part of the state where more people live wood prices are around $250.00 a cord for what they call seasoned wood.

Randy
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Offline jackpine

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #12 on: November 13, 2007, 07:49:13 am »
Firewood here in central Wisconsin is selling for $130 to $150 for a full cord. This is split but not delivered oak wich is oak wilt killed wood and may not be seasoned very well.There is so much oak available here (because of the oak wilt) that prices remain low and the beer money guys keep it that way.

Bill

Offline sharp edge

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #13 on: November 13, 2007, 08:28:10 am »
Bill
Same thing going on in n-wi  :( , but on the bright side the beer is nice and cool this time of year. 8)
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Offline stonebroke

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #14 on: November 13, 2007, 09:16:39 am »
In CNY semiseasoned( inlog for a while) wood is going for 160 to 180$.  Fully seasoned wood is going for 225$. I guess it all depends on your area and how many guys with pickup truck and chainsaws there are around. You cannot buy a new skidder and processing equipment  and sell for that money. But on a brighter note at least the price is up. It had remained at the same price around here since the 70's .

Stonebroke

Offline rebocardo

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #15 on: November 13, 2007, 10:14:27 am »
Around here it is selling for $100-$150 a cord, hardwood, split, seasoned, and delivered.  Though what I have seen that passes for seasoned means it was cut the last season, as in August. Some advertise $200 a cord, I suspect it only sells at the height of winter.
 
You pretty much can't find a buyer for pine unless it is the dead of winter and maybe then $50 a cord.

When I sold firewood about two years ago, I did a brisk business selling it for $70 a cord cut and split (they pick up and load) with mixed oak and sweetgum. Some buyers would come, buy a 1/2 a cord (truck load) and then come back an hour later for some more. I suspect they sold quite a bit at the local supermarket parking lot up the street :D


Offline SwampDonkey

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #16 on: November 13, 2007, 10:41:57 am »
It's amazing how many people will work for nothing and feel good about it.  :D :D :D

Pre-commercial thinning pays off. :)

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Offline leweee

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #17 on: November 13, 2007, 10:44:45 am »
I see a few factors at play in my neighborhood.
      1.less in the house wood stoves.(insurance companies hate  wood stoves) ::)
      2.People who burn wood are converting to outdoor boilers(less cut & split, more large pieces)
       3.More firewood processers.(machines cost money.....lots of volume on tight margins....lots of people having custom processing done that wouldn't have in the past.)
       4.Everyone that has a pickup & a chainsaw is in the Firewood Business. :D 8)
just another beaver with a chainsaw &  it's never so bad that it couldn't get worse.

Offline WDH

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #18 on: November 13, 2007, 10:48:02 am »
One thing about the BTU calculator......When wood and oil are equal, they really are not equal.  There is much more work and personal time involved with wood versus oil, so if you buy wood at a price equal to an equivalent amount of oil, the wood turns out to be more expensive because of all the work in stacking, toting, storing, tending, etc.  With oil, you just flip a switch or thermostat and you are good to go.

However, I still choose wood ;D.
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Offline Warbird

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Re: Firewood prices
« Reply #19 on: November 13, 2007, 11:00:40 am »
Any of you guys burn dunnage? There is a shipping/railroad company up here that sells huge rolls of dunnage.  It is mostly oak slabs, at least 1.5" thick, varying lengths.  Last time I checked, it was a great deal.  Just not sure about burning dunnage in the wood stove with the catalyst.  I'm concerned any oil or crud on the wood might damage the catalyst when it burns off.

 


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