A weekend should be fine.
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Brush Pile Burning Question
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Thanks guys. It’s in mason county which is unit under a burn ban per the website.
Also on a good note, these piles are near my well so I can stretch a hose over there and wet everything around the burn pile down real well. And spray any remaining logs before I leave
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Originally posted by Hogmauler View PostOk. Dumb question. If you call the county, the burn ban is off, and you ask them if you can burn, are you still ultimately responsible for anything that may happen after you received the ok?
I’ve had dozer work done on our place and have about three piles that can be burned but don’t have a dozer on site.
Even in a burn ban you can some times get exceptions. They should tell you the hoops you will have to jump through.
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Originally posted by Hogmauler View PostExactly! I had a TP&W biologist tell me they’d come out and do a controlled burn them after that it’d be on me. I’m thinking “oh hail naw. I ain’t burning someone else’s property up”!
Can you light it up and keep it going in a light rain?
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If your pile is sufficiently dry and you can get it started, a light rain would be fine. A good hot fire won’t be deterred by a mist or drizzle but it should wet the area down enough that a spark won’t set everything else afire. I don’t burn my piles without my tractor or backhoe though, just in case. I have two I need to burn now, but waiting for deer season to be over.
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Originally posted by Ætheling View PostI prefer burning in a light rain.
my tractor has a leak in a hydraulic cylinder and now battery is dead. Gotta get those fixed bfore I can be ready to burn.
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I have 2 piles at my place ready to go and 2 real big piles at the other place. Probably gonna wait till dead of winter before I light those up. Don’t want to catch the leaves on fire that haven’t fallen off the nearby trees!!!
Plus, I want to do it when I have nothing else to do and I can sit and watch it burn while enjoying some cold ones!!!
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Originally posted by RJK70 View PostHow long typically does it take for a brush pile to burn down?
Obviously there is a lot of variables but in general.
Just wondering if I can get a pile burned down over a two day weekend trip.
It’s a pretty good sized pile. Mostly consisting of dead oak limbs and some trunks. It’s is very dead and dry. Been dead for many years.
This is the first or many to burn on my property it it’s right by the cabin and had some construction trash in there so it needs to go.
Any tips for burning are welcome also.
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Most of the time I just played the wind direction before I would burn certain ones since I'm surrounded by other farms/ranches.
Your best bet is to keep it pushed together, it will totally burn to nothing. Since I did not have the equipment to do that, it created much more work for me than it should've been.
Good luck!
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