Firewood Sales & Delivery

At Grabeldinger Firewood & Logging, all our firewood is sourced from our own selective cut hardwood operations — meaning you’re getting truly local, responsibly harvested wood. We don’t buy in bulk, resell junk species, or cut corners. What we deliver is what we burn ourselves: clean, consistent hardwood that burns hot and lasts long.

Whether you’re heating your home all winter or just stocking up for the fire pit, we offer a range of firewood options to fit your needs.

What We Offer

  • Split Firewood – Green or seasoned, sold by the face cord or multiple cords

  • Bulk Log Loads – Process-your-own loads, approx. 6-8 face cords per trailer load

  • Firewood Bundles – Ideal for campgrounds, weekend rentals, and event use

  • Hardwood Only – Oak, hickory, beech, cherry, maple, ash, black locust

Our wood is processed using a Cord King Model 60 firewood processor with a 60" slasher saw and 8 way wedge , giving you consistent sizing and cleaner stacking. We handle everything ourselves — from felling to splitting — so there’s no mystery about what’s in your stack.

Delivery Details

We offer local delivery with flexible options:

  • Dumped at your location — driveway, yard, or pad depending on access

  • as small as one face cord deliveries depending on availability and route scheduling

  • Clean, dry loads — no mud, no rot, no filler species

Click Here To View Our FirewoodPricing Table
(Includes delivery zones, current rates, and product details)

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s in a face cord?
A face cord is 4 feet high by 8 feet long with pieces around 16"–18" deep — roughly 1/3 of a full cord. 42 cubic feet in a stacked pile or 60 cubic feet in a loose thrown pile. Our trailers and trucks are measured out and filled based on the 60 cubic feet loose thrown per face cord rule.

Is your seasoned wood truly dry?
Yes — our seasoned wood is typically 12–20% moisture content. We bulk pile into a large storage area where it sits for months before sale. We don’t rush the drying process or mislabel green wood.

How far in advance should I order?
Fall fills up fast. We recommend placing your order 2-4 weeks in advance during peak season. For large or recurring orders, earlier is better.

Do you stack the firewood?
No — all firewood is delivered dumped in a pile. Customers are responsible for stacking. We aim to place it in a convenient, accessible spot based on your property layout.

Additional Options

Wholesale & Bulk Buyers
We offer wholesale firewood options for local businesses, campgrounds, event venues, and property managers. Firewood bundles are available for regular delivery or bulk pickup — great for resale or guest use.

If you're looking for a consistent, local supplier of clean, well-processed firewood, we’d be happy to talk through pricing and logistics.

Customer Loyalty
Many of our customers reorder from us year after year — and that means a lot. We’ve built long-term relationships by delivering exactly what we say we will: properly seasoned hardwood, fair quantities, and no games.

Our Promise

Every piece of firewood we sell started as a tree we personally harvested. The saw-quality logs are sent to the mill for lumber, and the tops and remaining sections are processed into firewood. Nothing goes to waste — we make use of the entire tree.

When you buy from us, you’re getting firewood that’s been responsibly harvested, properly seasoned, and honestly measured.

Just like the rest of our business, we have many repeat customers and take pride in the relationships we build through quality products and a straightforward, honest approach. We heat with wood ourselves, so we know what makes for a good burn — and we don’t sell anything we wouldn’t use at home.

Contact us today to place an order or ask about wholesale availability.

Our Dump trailer unloading 6 face cords of premium firewood in Rome, NY to give the customer time to season before winter.
Tigercat 230 log loader filling the deck of a Cord King firewood processor and loading a dump truck for a premium firewood delivery at a logging landing in Whitestown, NY.