Safari Dave
AH elite
- Joined
- May 19, 2008
- Messages
- 1,857
- Reaction score
- 4,977
- Location
- Georgia, USA
- Media
- 36
- Member of
- SCI, NRA, SCTP, SSSF, IHEA, IGFA, TU, NASP, USA Archery, Cherokee Gun Club
- Hunted
- RSA, MOZ, Wyoming, Botswana, New Mexico, Florida, Georgia, Arkansas, Alabama, South Carolina, Texas.
When I was a junior in college, a friend and and I cut enough fire wood to pay for a week-long skiing trip!
There was customer who didn't want it split, because he enjoyed doing it for exercise, but he paid us, just the same.
A Fiskars Splitting Axe is a marvelous tool!
However, different logs require different splitting tools.
It's worth it to have several options, until you have can afford to have something that can split anything!
Being able to split, otherwise "unsplittable" forked logs is easy with a hydraulic wood splitter.
And, if you can't get gasoline, get a whole bunch of manual tools. As far as manual tools go, there is no "silver bullet," different woods/logs require different tools for best results.
I enjoy manually splitting logs, with my Fiskars, as long as I don't have to chase pieces of wood through the forest.
An old tire can fix that problem:
There was customer who didn't want it split, because he enjoyed doing it for exercise, but he paid us, just the same.
A Fiskars Splitting Axe is a marvelous tool!
However, different logs require different splitting tools.
It's worth it to have several options, until you have can afford to have something that can split anything!
Being able to split, otherwise "unsplittable" forked logs is easy with a hydraulic wood splitter.
And, if you can't get gasoline, get a whole bunch of manual tools. As far as manual tools go, there is no "silver bullet," different woods/logs require different tools for best results.
I enjoy manually splitting logs, with my Fiskars, as long as I don't have to chase pieces of wood through the forest.
An old tire can fix that problem:
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