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Been 5 days and a few sprigs of new grass are already showing.
80 degrees and plenty of rain make it fast. |
Hard to see in this pic, but it's covered with short 1-2" grass sprigs.
A good start for not having to water it at all. Rains were timely. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1753641017.jpg |
Didn't have to deal with a grinder! I used my mini excavator and dug that sucker out!
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^^^ I had a larger Maple tree done at the same time and had them grind that one out. (because it was in the middle of the lawn)
Comparing the two spots now...the one I used the Stump Out on looks better. The one they ground out is settling already....so I'll need to fill it up and reseed it. . |
^^^ I've been letting mine settle and plan to plant in the fall. Pulling that big ol' root ball leaves a pretty good hole in the ground.
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^^^ Today is prob our hottest day of the summer here.
90 degrees, sunny, no wind. A 'feels like' temp of 103 |
I'm using Steve's method. We have several small stumps that my wife often hits in the mower. I bought some charcoal and flashing (need more of both). I've got 2 small and one medium sized stump going. I didn't spring for the Kingsford with the built in lighter fluid. I figured a bit of news paper, and the newspaper that I have was used as packing in a box that I received. The paper must be treated because it doesn't want to burn, but I have all three piles of charcoal going.
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Opps.
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Look into the 'Swedish Fire Log' method.
-split the base into sections. wait to dry presumably. -add combustibles -a stump is now a contained long term source for a grill. |
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The Kingsford Match Light....doesn't burn nearly as long as reg charcoal or reg Kingsford. It's just easier to start. If you don't think it'll burn long enough..add some more charcoal or scrap wood that you have from any wood project. It'll burn the inside of the stump out...but will leave the outside bark layer. That can be taken out when done with a small chain saw or axe. |
I've got a nice mat of green grass over the filled hole. Almost thick enough to mow....but we're supposed to have a week of hot, dry weather. If I don't mow it, it'll provide enough shade to keep it from dyeing.
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THe main/biggest stump is going well. One of the smaller ones is also doing well. The other small one may end up being OK. |
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That's got me stumped. :D . |
All 3 are progressing nicely with hot coals. The big one is burning the stump like mad. The two smaller ones are hard to see the progress, but the coals are hot, so should be making progress.
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^^^ Hopefully the rains hold off.
It's surprising how long the coals can keep burning if they stay dry. |
No rain in the forecast for the next week+. Every day 5-25%, so probably safe for a bit. I'll probably be able to reuse the flashing from 2 that I'm burning now on the two that are left. I'll buy another bag of charcoal and be good to go.
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If you’ve heard of underground coal fires, then you’ve probably heard of the one raging under the abandoned town of Centralia, Pennsylvania, since 1962. Fifty-two years is a long time—and a lot of coal—but that’s barely a blink compared to Burning Mountain in Australia, which has been ablaze for 6,000 years. |
I like todrill some holes in the stump and turn it into a rocket stove.
Zero chance of an underground fire here |
I burned out several stumps a few years ago by simply tossing firewood logs onto them for a couple days. I did not use a can around them although that would have been nice. Every couple hours I would blast them with a leaf blower to get them glowing hot then toss on some more logs. I kept this up over a weekend and got them burnt down to just below grade. Other than my time, this cost me nothing.
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On the farm as a 10 year old boy I was highly pissed of with my mother for not letting me buy explosives from the farm supply store. We had some pretty big stumps that needed blowing up and I was just the guy to do it.
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Same here....rock hard Michigan clay dirt doesn't burn too well.:) . |
Burning the stump is my go-to method. Works great.
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Still burning? How's the progress? . |
Yep, still going and is working really well. I should have used more charcoal on the biggest stump and done the smaller stumps later. The biggest stump is probably 6-8" below grade, except there was one spot where the trunk had a root that sticking out to the side where I didn't have charcoal (the plan was to spread the charcoal over to that spot, but I clearly forgot), and that point is still proud of the ground level. I took the coals from the two small trunks and from the center of the still very hot big trunk and stacked them up on that spot, so I suspect that by tomorrow or the next day that spot will be good. The two smaller trunks are good. In the future, I'll use a bit more charcoal. I've got one or two more trunks to burn. The key seems to be to use enough charcoal to cover the top of the trunks.
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^^^ Great!...Let her burn!
I almost had a path in my lawn checking on the fire before the rain came. Sure beats swinging an axe. :) |
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