How to Properly Season and Stack Firewood for a Kansas City Winter

Don’t you hate when you’ve stacked what looks like a solid cord of wood, only to find it’s still smoking up your fireplace come December – get it off the ground, leave the sides open, and stop wrapping it like leftover furniture in a storage unit. This guide walks you through exactly how to stack wood for seasoning firewood so it burns cleaner, drafts better, and doesn’t turn your first cold night into a smoke alarm situation.

Build the pile so the wood can dry instead of stew

Don’t you hate when you do everything you think is right – split the wood, stack it neat, throw a tarp over it – and then pull a piece out in November and it’s still as wet as the day you cut it? The fix isn’t complicated, but it does require thinking about the stack differently. Give the wood a job: base rows carry weight and stay off the ground, middle rows create the airflow channels that actually do the drying, and top rows shed water away from everything underneath. Every split has a purpose. Random piling just gives you a wet, heavy mess by the time you need it most.

Six inches off the ground is where I like to begin, because rot starts lower than people think. A pallet, a pair of treated runners, or a simple metal rack all work – anything that breaks contact between the wood and the soil. The goal out here isn’t a woodpile that looks good next to a fireplace. The goal is a dry-burning outdoor stack that actually does its job when the temperature drops. And honestly, I’d rather see a slightly plain stack that dries correctly than a perfectly styled pile that smokes up the fireplace and makes you think your chimney’s broken when it isn’t. The best-looking stacks I’ve been called to inspect are often the worst performers – packed too tight, too pretty, not a gap in sight.

5-Step Setup for Stacking Wood for Seasoning

  1. 1

    Choose a spot with sun and moving air. Not a dead corner wedged between a fence and a wall. Shade and still air are the two fastest ways to keep wood wet through an entire season.
  2. 2

    Raise the stack at least 6 inches. Pallets, treated lumber runners, or a commercial firewood rack all work. Ground contact means moisture wicking up from below – it never stops.
  3. 3

    Stack splits in straight rows, not jammed flush. Orient bark as needed for stability, but leave slight gaps between pieces. A row packed like a brick wall doesn’t breathe – it just looks like it’s working.
  4. 4

    Cover only the top. Metal roofing, a sheet of plywood weighted down, or a fitted firewood cover that doesn’t drape over the sides – that’s all you need. Both ends and both sides stay exposed.
  5. 5

    Keep the stack away from structures. A foot or two of clearance from walls, garages, and fences limits trapped moisture, reduces pest attraction, and gives you the kind of airflow that actually dries wood.

⚠ Why Full Tarping Ruins Seasoning Firewood

Draping a plastic tarp all the way to the ground on all four sides is one of the most common and most damaging mistakes. It seals in humidity, kills evaporation, and creates a warm, damp microclimate inside the pile. Even after months outside, the center rows often stay wet – sometimes wetter than the day you stacked them. A covered top is protection. A covered everything is a slow cooker for green wood.

Read your yard before you place a single split

Where Kansas City wind and shade help or hurt

If I’m standing in your yard, the first thing I’ll ask is, where does your wind actually come from? Kansas City runs humid in the summer, throws freeze-thaw cycles all through late fall, and gets storms that can dump standing water against whatever fence or wall your wood is leaning on. A spot that looks open in August can be a damp trap by October once the leaves drop and block what little airflow you had. And if you’re in an older neighborhood – Brookside, Waldo, places where the lots were built when yards were narrower and houses were closer together – those tight side passages stay damp longer than people expect. I’ve walked side yards in Brookside where there was barely enough light to read a moisture meter at 11 in the morning. Shade and tight walls slow seasoning more than most people account for.

Truth is, most bad firewood stacks fail before winter even shows up. I was at a house in Brookside at about 7:15 on a freezing January morning, and the homeowner was absolutely certain the chimney was the problem. It wasn’t. Their firewood stack was jammed tight against the garage wall under a plastic tarp that hung all the way to the ground. When I split one piece open, the center looked like a damp sponge. That call took ten minutes of looking at the wood and about an hour of convincing. The fix was straightforward: move the stack away from the wall, top-cover only, and give the sides enough exposure to let moving air do its job. The chimney was fine the whole time.

Location Airflow Score Rain Protection Drying Speed Use It or Avoid It
Open backyard away from structures Excellent Low (needs cover) Fast ✅ Use It
South or west-facing fence line with clearance Good Partial wind block Good ✅ Use It
Side yard between house and fence Poor Trapped moisture Very Slow ❌ Avoid It
Against garage or house wall Very Poor Wall reflects moisture back Very Slow ❌ Avoid It
Open shed or carport with breeze through Good-Excellent Good overhead coverage Fast ✅ Use It

How far from the house makes sense

If Your Yard Has One of These Layouts

Narrow side yard with little sun
Don’t stack firewood in a narrow side yard, period. Low light and trapped air make it nearly impossible to get moisture content down before burning season. If there’s truly no other option, raise the stack as high as you reasonably can, top-cover only, and plan on needing extra dry time – probably an extra month or more compared to a well-placed open-yard stack. Checking with a moisture meter is non-negotiable in this setup.
Detached garage with open breezeway nearby
This is one of the better setups in a typical Kansas City backyard. Position the stack at the breezeway opening where air actually moves through – not tucked against the back wall of the garage where it stagnates. A partial roof overhang works well as your top cover. Keep at least 12-18 inches of clearance from the garage wall itself to avoid moisture transfer from the structure.
Fence line that blocks prevailing wind
A solid fence on the windward side of your stack kills airflow. If the fence is unavoidable, move the stack at least 3-4 feet away from it to catch any wind that crests over the top, and orient the long side of the stack perpendicular to the fence rather than parallel. This gives whatever air movement exists a chance to pass through the rows instead of sliding around the outside.
Sloped backyard that sheds water toward the stack
Slope changes the ground-moisture equation significantly. Position the stack perpendicular to the slope runoff so water moves past it rather than pooling underneath. The raised base becomes even more important here – don’t go below 8 inches off the ground if your yard drains toward the stack’s location. After heavy Kansas City thunderstorms, check that no standing water is sitting beneath the pallets or runners.

Spot the mistakes that make ‘seasoned’ wood act green

Here’s the blunt part: a pretty woodpile can still burn terribly. I had a late-evening service visit in Lee’s Summit after an early cold snap – the couple swore the popping and smoking had come out of nowhere. Turned out they’d bought “seasoned” wood from a roadside seller earlier that week. I knocked two splits together on their driveway under the porch light and heard that dull thud instead of a clean crack, and I said, “This wood is still introducing itself to being dry.” They laughed, but they also stopped burning it that night. Truly dry wood makes a sharp, almost hollow crack when two pieces hit each other – it’s one of the fastest field tests you’ve got. Buying wood labeled “seasoned” doesn’t replace checking the weight, the sound, and the end grain yourself. Light weight, visible checking at the ends, and a clean crack are your green lights. Everything else is a reason to wait.

Myth Fact
“If it was sold as seasoned, it’s ready to burn.” “Seasoned” is not a regulated label. Roadside sellers and even legitimate suppliers can mislabel wood. Check moisture content yourself – under 20% is the target for clean burning.
“A full tarp keeps wood drier.” Full tarping traps humidity inside the pile and stops evaporation. The outside looks dry while the center stays wet for months. Cover the top only, and leave the sides open.
“Round decorative stacks season faster.” Circular towers look impressive but trap moisture in the center where airflow can’t reach. The outer ring may dry fine while the core stays green through the entire season.
“If the outside looks gray, the inside is dry.” Gray bark means surface weathering, not internal dryness. Check the end grain for checking (small cracks radiating from center), feel the weight, and use a moisture meter to confirm.
“Any wood cut last spring is ready by first frost.” Dense hardwoods like oak and hickory – both common in Kansas City – need 12 to 18 months to season properly. Spring-cut wood stacked poorly won’t be ready by October no matter how long it sat outside.

Fast Checks Before a Split Goes Into the Fireplace

  • Clean crack when struck: Knock two splits together – dry wood gives a sharp, hollow crack. That’s the sound you want.
  • Light for its size: Pick it up. Dry wood loses a significant amount of its green weight. If it feels surprisingly heavy, it’s not ready.
  • Visible end checking with loose or missing bark: Cracks radiating from the end grain and bark that separates easily are reliable signs of proper drying.
  • Dull thud when struck: That sound means the moisture is still inside, absorbing the impact instead of transferring it. Don’t burn it yet.
  • Piney, sappy, or sharp green smell: Dry hardwood smells faintly woody at most. A strong fresh or sour smell means significant moisture is still present.
  • Moisture meter reading above 20%: A basic pin-style moisture meter runs under $30 and removes all guesswork. Readings above 20% mean creosote buildup risk goes up fast.

Use a stacking pattern that gives every piece real work

What to do with the bottom row, middle rows, and top course

Last fall, I watched a man stack oak so tightly you could’ve balanced a coffee mug on the side of it. Right before a Chiefs game weekend, I ended up helping a customer in Waldo restack about two-thirds of a cord because his nephew had built one of these giant round towers – it looked like something you’d see on a homesteading blog, genuinely impressive. Problem was, it had rained the night before, the bottom row was already going soft from ground contact, and every piece in the middle smelled green. Standing there in muddy boots, I told them: firewood is not patio décor. It’s fuel, and fuel needs air. The nephew’s round tower had a structural problem – the center pieces had nowhere to release moisture because they were completely surrounded. No airflow means no drying, no matter how long you wait.

A woodpile should breathe like a backstage curtain – held in place, never sealed shut. That’s where most people get tripped up: they think a tight, even stack looks right, so it must work right. Here’s the insider piece: leave slight irregularity and micro-gaps between splits instead of pressing every piece flush. You’re not building a wall. You’re building an air-movement system that happens to hold wood. The pile stays stable – base rows wide and weighted, middle rows straight with small natural gaps from irregular splits, top rows angled slightly to shed water. Showroom symmetry is not the goal. Moving air through is the goal. Tiny gaps aren’t sloppy; they’re doing real work.

Wood is fuel, not yard art. Stack it like it has a job to do before winter gets here, because it does.

❌ Decorative / Tight Stack

  • Rows compressed with every split pressed flush
  • Sides wrapped in plastic tarp to the ground
  • Round tower or circular pile construction
  • Stacked directly against a wall or garage
  • No gap strategy – looks clean, traps moisture
  • Result: Center rows stay wet; smoky, hard-to-start fires

✅ Airflow-First Stack

  • Raised base on pallets, runners, or rack – 6 inches minimum
  • Straight rows with natural micro-gaps for air movement
  • Top-only cover: metal, plywood, or fitted cap
  • Both sides and ends fully exposed to moving air
  • Positioned away from structures with clearance
  • Result: Even drying throughout; cleaner, hotter burns

Practical Stacking Questions

How long does oak usually need in Kansas City?
Oak is one of the densest hardwoods you’ll find in this region, and it needs 12 to 18 months of proper seasoning minimum – often closer to 18 if it was stacked late or in a poor location. Kansas City’s humid summers slow the process compared to drier climates. Don’t let anyone sell you spring-cut oak and tell you it’s ready by October. It isn’t.
Should bark face up or down?
For the top row, bark-side up makes sense – it acts as a natural water-shedding layer. For the middle rows, bark orientation matters less than stability and gap management. Don’t rearrange perfectly placed middle-row splits just to get bark in a specific direction. Stability and airflow win over bark positioning every time.
Is stacking against the house ever okay?
Not for a seasoning stack. Walls trap moisture, and wood stacked against your house is also a pest highway – termites, carpenter ants, and rodents will use a wall-adjacent woodpile as a bridge to your structure. For a small convenience stack of already-dry wood you’re actively burning through, a brief stay against the house isn’t catastrophic. But for seasoning? Keep it away.
How many rows deep should a seasoning stack be?
One split deep – meaning a single-width stack, not multiple rows stacked front-to-back – gives you the best airflow through the pile. Two splits deep is workable if you stagger the rows and leave a small gap between the front and back layer. More than two deep and you’re building a moisture trap in the center, which is the same problem the round tower creates. Thinner and taller beats thick and compact for drying performance.

If your fireplace is still smoking, drafting poorly, or struggling with wood that was supposed to be ready to burn, that’s a good sign it’s time to have the fireplace and chimney looked at before winter use ramps up. Call ChimneyKS – we’ll sort out whether the issue is the wood, the stack, the flue, or something else entirely, and get you burning clean before the cold really settles in.