We do all of the above. I burn good stuff to make maple syrup, put it in the bottom of new raised beds, build mounds for my wife to garden on, and burn a small amount. I occasionally bury some as well.
Homestead
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This is a community for people who are working toward a sustainable personal environment. This includes crofters, homesteaders, hobby, small, and family farmers. Hunters, gatherers, cultivators, and keepers are all welcome.
There may be discussions of animal harvesting and processing. This is part of the homesteading reality. If you don't like it leave and block the community.
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RULES:
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All Lemmy.ca rules apply here.
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Everyone (see rules 4 and 98) is welcome.
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If you've seen a question 100 times answer it the 101st time or ignore it. Even better, write a complete, detailed answer and suggest that the mod(s) pin it to the community.
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[Did you actually think there were 98 rules?]
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If you present something as fact and are asked to provide proof or a source provide proof or a source. Proof must be from a reliable source. If you fail to provide proof or a source your post or comment may be removed.
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Don't be a dick. Yes, this is a catch-all rule. Yes, you absolutely can be permanently banned for Rule 98 violations.
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The mod(s) have the final say.
We have a good deal of wind, so we use it to stuff into the bottom of the hedges. As an added bonus it provides habitats for a lot of insects.
I mean, if you like the aesthetic of dead rotting wood you could epoxy it and make whatever you want really. But honestly as far as practical value goes charcoal is probably about it.
We're similar. We only have a little wood burner, but will be doing maple over wood instead of propane turkey fryers next year so hopefully that will use some up.
I like to keep a pile of branches about 300 cu ft for no-dig mortality composting in case something medium sized dies. Infinitely easier than burying. If our luck is good and a pile starts to rot I chip it and start a new one.
Hugel mounds for sure, and this year I'm cutting into any soft logs, putting cut side down so they get good and gross for next year's hugel beds and mushrooms.
If it keeps going like last winter I'm just going to start making rough cut benches everywhere. Who doesn't like a bench?
I've thought about benches and stuff too lol. Also considered making a three sided enclosure for the compost pile out of logs, just stacked like Linkin logs. It would last a few years and then just turn into compost itself. Then I can add another layer of logs on the outside.
That's a great idea too, we have a lot of random mounds because we mostly mulch by rotating where we dump horse stalls and the spring cleanup of the sheep/goat deep bedding. It'd be nice to keep them all from spreading downhill a bit better.