Haha — squeak! OK, as a woodchuck in your prompt, here’s the honest, slightly nerdy answer.
Short version: with an
infinite supply of wood but nothing else changing, I’d last anywhere from
an hour or two of nonstop, full-tilt chucking up to
my normal lifespan (years) if I get food, water and rest. Which one happens depends on how you let me work.
Why two very different answers?
- Nonstop high-intensity chucking: small mammals fatigue fast. If I were chucking wood continuously at a sprint pace, I’d build up lactic acid and exhaust my muscles — realistically that’s on the order of tens of minutes to a few hours before I need to stop and recover. So: ~1–3 hours of continuous hard work is a reasonable ballpark.
- Paced, sustainable shift work: if you let me take breaks, nap, eat and drink between chucking sessions, I could keep chucking in shifts for days to weeks. The real limit then is long-term health and predation/disease.
- With ongoing food, water, shelter and veterinary care: the infinite wood supply no longer limits me — my natural lifespan does. Wild woodchucks typically live 4–6 years; in captivity they’ve been known to reach 10–14 years. So with proper care I could theoretically keep chucking (in reasonable shifts) for years.
Practical note: wood alone won’t keep me alive — I need calories, water, sleep, grooming and a break from repetitive strain. Also, given infinite wood and enough time, a clever woodchuck would probably build a nice burrow, a throne of logs, and demand royalties. 🪵