Find Firewood in Your State
- Alabama (2)
- Arizona (341)
- California (29)
- Colorado (6)
- Georgia (4)
- Illinois (354)
- Indiana (27)
- Iowa (14)
- Kentucky (1)
- Louisiana (8)
- Maryland (1)
- Michigan (2)
- Missouri (25)
- NC (1)
- Nebraska (22)
- Nevada (3)
- New York (3)
- NS (1)
- Ohio (4)
- ON (1)
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FAQs
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What’s the hottest burning firewood?
Osage orange burns hottest at 32-33 million BTUs per cord, followed by hickory and black locust. Oak offers the best balance of heat and availability.
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What’s the difference between hardwood and softwood firewood?
Hardwoods are denser and burn longer with more heat, while softwoods ignite faster and burn quicker—both have advantages when properly seasoned.
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Can you burn green (unseasoned) wood?
You can burn green wood, but shouldn’t—it produces minimal heat, maximum smoke, dangerous creosote buildup, and wastes money.
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What is a cord of firewood?
A cord of firewood is 128 cubic feet, measuring 4 feet high × 4 feet deep × 8 feet long when neatly stacked.
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Can you burn firewood in the rain?
You can burn well-seasoned firewood during rain if it’s been stored under cover. Focus on dry kindling and sheltered fire pits for outdoor burning in wet weather.
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Rancho La Casa Firewood
