How do you know?

Chinchilla & Hedgehog Pet Forum

Help Support Chinchilla & Hedgehog Pet Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Mookie

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 30, 2009
Messages
355
Location
New Jersey
How do you know when your wood is dry? I tried the DIY makig wood. and I choose Birch because I have birch trees in my from yard. I cut a kind've on the larger size branch and cleaned in then baked it for an hour and a half. How do I know if it's dried? It still bends without breaking.
 
I think you're supposed to let it air-dry for a while to dry out any moisture that was missed during the baking process.
 
I hit mine on the counter. If it's a *thud* it's still wet. If it's a *thwack* it's dry-taught to me by Wood Goddess herself, Ronda!

I bake my wood for 3+ hours at 230 and then let it sit in the oven overnight.
 
Thank you! Can it airdry? and get the moisture out for a while instead of back in the oven? and also to make the hanging ladders, what material do you use to hold the pieces together?
 
Yes, you can air dry to finish the drying process after the oven. When you say hanging ladders, do you mean the bridges? Those people use chain or wire.
 
I've been told to not let it air dry. Though if it's hot outside, you can put it in your car.

I use 16G wire for all of my hanging stuff for sturdiness. You can use 1.6mm or larger chain as well.
 
I've been told to not let it air dry. Though if it's hot outside, you can put it in your car.

I use 16G wire for all of my hanging stuff for sturdiness. You can use 1.6mm or larger chain as well.

Do you know why they recommend not air drying? I know I have to air dry the large pieces that won't fit into my oven for the birds. Just curious.
 
As far as air drying down here in southeast area, most of the time our humidity levels are high.I did try letting a few small pieces air dry on a piece of wire mesh(to keep air circulating all around the wood) in the aisleway of my barn. It molded within 3 days. Now I have processed some big pieces of pecan wood( still small enough to fit in and dry in oven mostly) then I put them loosely packed in my pickup truck cab during July and they dried completely out and no mold after about a week.
 
It gets pretty hot and dry here where we are. No humidity problems at all. Not even in the winter time with a oil furnace. Zaps the moisture right out of the air. :)
 
Back
Top