Gary adds plywood to the sides of the 8 ft. bed to hold a cord of shavings. It's much appreciated that the lumberyard bucketloads the shavings into the truck bed for you. When you get it home, it up to you. We have two shavings bins, one in the rabbitry, the other in the horse barn. When both bins were built, an outside trap door was built so that you can stand upright in the bed of the pickup and shovel directly into the bin. If both bins are full, it takes us pretty much through the year.
I love the smell of fresh cut hay when we get it in. The fresh shavings smell even better and it lasts for weeks and weeks as you keep uncovering a new area. We take it out of the horse barn first while there is no snow to trudge through. I use one of those big plastic tubs with hard rope handles to ferry from the horse barn to rabbitry.
The local mill charges $63.00 per cord and even with gas figured in, it cuts the yearly shavings bill at least in half. So if you have storage space and a sawmill nearby, check it out. Like I said, I do use the store bought compressed bag shavings for nestboxes. The mill shavings are fluffy and light but not as finely cut as the bagged shavings which also do not harbor a real strong pine smell that might irritate young kits lungs.