I’m currently a student majoring in Industrial Engineering and it is fascinating hearing concepts I’m learning right now appear in this convo just based off the experience Joe has had trying to set up a process flow. You can tell he has spent many hours and lots of sweat to figure these ideas out for himself and I’m glad he is willing to help others learn!
Ask your mom to draw out an overhead “concept” diagram. Create little cut outs shaped like your equipment, so you can move them around. She did a great job on your garage.
I used to think this process was a waste of time. Till I did it. This advice is spot on !! Very worthwhile! I might add, keep the drawing and machine cut outs. You may have different ideas after using a set up, or, you may (gasp) add another piece of equipment.
Always enjoy the videos of you guys getting together. As a viewer I get a kick out of seeing 2 channels we watch for similar reasons being real people and actually getting together in reality.
I've only watched the first 8 minutes in my lunch break and this is a fascinating discussion. It's not firewood - it's process engineering, it's production management.
Joe has got some great points... before setting up a turn around I'd get a truck to come in and pick his brain.. just make sure he can back out till you get your property in order.. remember the truck has to unload before turning around because they will tear up whatever you do...
I'm hearing an important underlying story here too based on how Joe got into the business full time. A white collar job is hard to beat from a financial perspective up until early 40s. As you start getting into your late 40s and certainly 50s, that base salary starts to grow along with the target on your back. What Adam is doing now with respect to the RU-vid channel and the wood business is very smart because it's much easier to work out kinks while you're still in hobby/side hustle mode.
found this channel a couple weeks ago. been catching up from ep.1, just wanna say i absolutely love how everything about your content has evolved and grown except for your ego. keep it real, and keep up the good work! thanks for the great content.
@@AdamsMom921 OK, this is incredible!! You're Adam's Mom, & you respond to us 💕💕💕 Adam is amazing. His videos should always get positive comments. He knows what he's doing, he's interesting, entertaining, has great ideas/advice, always family safe ✨️, & I appreciate that. Have a blessed day. You did a wonderful job raising your son ✨️ 👍💕
@@DDL2728 I read all the comments on his new videos. He gets all comments on every video he has ever done. So someone who watches a 2 year old one… he gets notified. Thank goodness I don’t have that pressure!!! Thank you for your kind words about Adam. He is the apple of my eye and he makes me very proud. Take care.
Many local tree services must pay to dump their logs and if you also take the chips too they will call you almost weekly wanting to drop hardwood off to you for free.
Great interview, Adam! Joe seems like a great guy. In my estimation, he is an expert, even if he says he’s not. Anyone who can start and run a business for six years learns a lot along the way. It’s great that he is willing to share his knowledge with you and your viewers. Humble and generous - just like you. Good luck with laying out your wood yard.
Adam, I always enjoy your videos, and I'm a big fan of Joe also. The insights that he offers regarding how to sell firewood are always good to hear! He has built a very successful business through his hard work. I'm sure you will be able to do the same!
@18:18 a business person should be able to anticipate value in various markets too, with different customers. for example, cherry, hickory and oaks can make valuable lumber too, so one should be willing to switch to portable saw mills for cutting lumber as needs arise.
Great video. Definitely important to set up efficiently up front, otherwise you can lose time every day you work, and lose even more resetting everything later. I’m in the hobbyist camp now, just producing for my own heating needs, but I’ve contemplated expansion on and off for a few years now.
Joe has a real nice setup, and makes super good content. I recently purchased a processor, and the one he owns is definitely better quality, but the issue i had with that model was how small a diameter it can process. I believe it only has a 16" bar so realistically can process 12-14" logs versus mine has a 22" bar. It might not sound like a big deal, but it makes it a lot easier to get supplied with logs from loggers if your size range is broader.
Brilliant guest , great subject, very good presentation, wonderful sales attitude, beautiful advice . Will go see if he used the i.b.c. totes . Good job on this vid. He makes it sound like two giant leaps between his business and your hobby.
Id try to use the woodyard how you have set it up now and then see if it works for you or not. You can change parts afterwards if you find them not working out as great.
This is the best video I’ve seen with Ohio Joe, he has great knowledge and experience. Great choice to have him visit your woodyard, great ideas from both of you. 🇺🇸👍🏻👏🏻
One of the things I admire and respect about you, Adam. You know your limitations and you seek wise counsel from those with experience and knowledge. I have no doubt that when you get the whole process set up, it'll be clean and efficient.
Adam -- another wonderful job. I really like what you have done with the property and am looking forward to more work on the garage addition. Very well done!! Say hi to neighbor Doug!
Awesome video with a lot of good points. I know people that only buy wood for pleasure, where as I process 8 to 10 cords a year to heat my home. Unfortunately, there are a lot of people selling wood around us in the Aurora/Mantua Ohio area and I wonder if you could make a living at it, unless you captured Ohio Wood Burner’s concept.
2 main points Joe offered that are the key to success. The Customer and the workflow process for running you operation efficiently to get your optimal ROI. One thought for the trucks is making a backing lane for them to back into rather than a huge turn around area. I personally feel you would be losing to much space to create a turn around. jmo
I wouldn’t mess around with a turn around. Log truck drivers back up everyday. U need a lot of room for them to turn around which means wasted space for you. One thing to consider is how easy is it for log trucks to pull off the road onto your driveway. Like is your driveway big enough?
Small quantities at a premium price is the way to go if you're a one man operation and you want to make some money without running yourself ragged. I started selling by the tractor bucket load that was just shy of a face cord. I was selling it way too cheap to start. I could hardly keep up with orders. I knew there had to be a better way to sell a quantity that was bigger than a bundle and was easily moved and delivered. I started selling wood in 55 gallon food grade barrels with removable lids. Each barrel holds approx 1/6th of a face cord and I sell it for $45 delivered. So I'm now getting $270 per face cord instead of $60-$100 which is the going rate in my area. I openly tell people that buying wood from me is not the cheapest way to go but it's dry, in a weather/bug/rodent proof container and it's delivered right to their back yard. No handling, no stacking, no hauling heavy bags home from the gas station and it's good hardwood split small for easy and complete burning. Dave
The only way to make firewood work full time, is if your spouse still works elsewhere and has access to healthcare benefits for your family. If you gotta pay out of pocket to UPMC or Highmark each month for your family, your looking at least $1200-1500. How many cords do you gotta sell every single month just to cover healthcare? Add in insurance and fuel and pretty soon your doing a lot of work and not netting very much. This is why almost every successful small businessman I know has a spouse working elsewhere and covering their healthcare thru their work. Key component to keep in mind.
Hi Adam, very good video with Joe. Thought processes now save later relocation in the future. Just a quick idea. . When you have raw logs come in, wouldnt it be efficient to set some old utility poles on the ground 1st, perpendicular to the "skid way"? That way you have the logs up and not getting muddy or water"logged" on the ground. Sorry for the pun but just a thought from one of your fans.👍
Do either of you pay for those truck loads of logs? What is the average you pay, if you do? How do you keep the evergreen species from being part of the load? We are getting a lot of ash trees being taken down, due to local ordinances and obviously dead trees. Good for firewood in my opinion. Any advice on this part of the process would be great.
0:06 okay, a corporate job doesn't mean anything that could be IT. It could be accounts payable. It could be the CEO. It could be a whole lot of things. So what was Joe at that corporation exactly?
I don't agree. "SMED" is the concept that you can go from species "A" to species "B" as fast as you can do two of the same. In your environment that would be the ability to dump off the processor or axis into different bins all set up. Each is removed, stacked, and replaced as they individually fill. But an intermediate setup area with the pick, turn, travel, drop, turn, travel... Repeating with the loading of the processor, is horrific at best, and give up at worst. Spend that "effort" making a diverter chute that can spin 270 degrees into a semi-circle off your processor.
Aw man. I can't believe you just leave all those toys.. er.. equipment out in a field in all weathers. Would you not build some kind of cover for them. Even a few tarps.
Presuming this will grow into something more than a hobby, I'd invest in a wider live deck rather than wasting time cutting trees in half and then restacking prior to processing. Anywhere where wheeled access is needed, there needs to be a solid all-weather base - maybe 6-8" of crushed aggregate over a geotextile fabric with properly-graded yard and access roads (crowns/slopes/drainage pipes etc). Nothing worse than being unable to work because your work area is a slippery mudhole mess (as is Joe's all-too-often). All-weather access is probably the most overlooked aspect of these types of outdoor businesses.
He doesn't seem to be well organized is all. I'm not saying he is a bad guy but he doesn't really seem like he knows what he is going to do next is all.