Types of Firewood
Generally the most popular burning wood is oak. There are innumerable varieties widely available throughout the U.S. Oak is long burning (1 to 1 hours per log), smells nice and splits easily, but tends to be a bit more ashy and more high priced than other good alternatives. Unfortunately it's a rare find around this area. Depending on the region of the country, ash, beech, cherry, dogwood, elm, hickory, maple, pinion pine, pine, eucalyptus, mesquite and juniper are also popular. There's plenty of Citrus, eucalyptus and avocado to be had in the local wood dealers around here.
Having a good mix is handy, soft wood for starting and quick burns, heavy to medium for longer burn times and better heat output.
Sources of Firewood
It pays to be more concerned with the source than what or how much to get.
Know the dealer and make sure they have a license and sell only properly dried wood. In fact, in many states, firewood can only be sold by the cord or increments of a cord, no truckloads. At the very least get references before you buy. When you're all set for a romantic evening by the fire, there is nothing worse than discovering your supply of wood is wet and non-burnable.
What Is a Cord?
A cord is a measurement of neatly stacked and rowed wood that equals 128 cubic feet. The stack measures four-feet tall by four-feet wide by eight-feet long. You can purchase wood in increments from an eighth of a cord and up.
Be careful about buying wood off some guy's truck. Don't be fooled by terminology, There is no such thing as a face-cord. Before you order, there are other considerations: How long do you want the logs cut (how deep is your fireplace) and do you want whole or split logs? Whole logs burn slower but split logs start up easier. Many vendors will mix the cord with split and whole or you can split the logs yourself. It's not as hard as it sounds. There are many easy-to-use log-splitters on the market.
Make Your Own Firewood?
If you think you can save a buck by pruning your tree out front and burning it, think again. Tree prunings are too green and wet to burn. What about that old painted chair that's sitting out back? The paint on that old chair is liable to catch like wild fire and flame out the front of your fireplace causing serious damage and smoke.