Well since my life is basically a dumpster fire and I'm no where close to organized, i didn't have a bunch of seasoned firewood handy. I've been getting wood from my buddies wood pile, where he's been dumping logs for years, but that pile is pretty picked thru by now. He dropped a dead locust off earlier this year, standing dead but it is still a bit green, and i took down a silver maple a few months ago, the same. So i saw a redneck firewood kiln a guy did on youtube, basically using a salamander heater to blow hot dry air into a tiny shed, thus drying the wood. The guy stacked it well for drying, and only cooked it for about 2 hours and got pretty good results. So i cobbled up a wood box using some scrap wood i had laying around to see how it worked, and grabbed a small 50k btu kerosene/diesel heater, i figured if it didn't work i could definitely use it in the garage. So i cut up a load, threw it in my horribly slopped together box, and ran it for 4 hours since i didn't stack it, i just tossed it in there til it was full.
Well it worked, better than i could have hoped for. I don't have a moisture meter (I've been using a multimeter and nails) and i haven't had a chance to split one and see how well it really did, but from what I've seen out of it the stuff is really dry. The ends are cracked open, even at the end where i left it open to exhaust from. I'll report back how dry when i find time to split one, but the stuff I've burned thus far is really good. I'll probably keep running the cobbled together setup for this year's wood, but I'll be hunting materials to make a deal that I'll lower over the ibc tote so i don't have to touch it to dry it. Hopefully next year I'll be better but if this kills the bugs that alone will be worth it, not to mention the convenience of having perfectly dry wood no matter what. The heater uses 5 gallons of diesel for 14 hours of burn time, so the 4 hours i ran cost about 7 bucks, I'll take it.