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Thread: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

  1. #601
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    WRT the mult-flora...when I arrived at the camp there was an 8' wall along most of the eastern exposure trails. No kidding it was 8 feet deep and hundreds of feet long. I started with a gas powered Stihl pole saw than moved on to spray. It's taken three years to get them down to ground level. This year, I'm able to zap poision ivy that warmed the multi-flora's feet as well :) Oh, there are posion ivy vines as thick as my leg that I dispatch with a hand saw and eye protection. It ain't pretty.

    The optimistic goal is to get rid of the invasive tree species leaving one good native every 30' feet and ground surface that I can maintain with a DR brush hog....I'm soooo close to that goal.

    I'm no arborist but I love to play one on TV. Last yr. I planted a genetic survivor American Elm that is aloready 8' tall. Also, a zone 7 hardy Granddflora. The elm will someday be the largest tree on all 90+ acres and the Magnolia should top out at 50'. We have mature Chinese Chestnuts which produce countless pounds of nuts. The deer love it and some of my pals actually make flour from that. I could go on, I'm following in the footsteps as they say.

    By this time next year I'll be looking at pretty manageable slopes for the first time in many many years before my arrival.

    #d#mnstraight
    Last edited by Too Tall; 05-05-2024 at 08:16 PM.

  2. #602
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Not just for "country living", this changed my world: https://us.solo.global/product/teles...ay-tube-48-92/
    John Clay
    Tallahassee, FL
    My Framebuilding: https://www.flickr.com/photos/21624415@N04/sets

  3. #603
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    My tools today were my hands and back.
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    Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
    Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com

  4. #604
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Quote Originally Posted by bigbill View Post
    My tools today were my hands and back.
    My back hurts just looking at this picture.

  5. #605
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Quote Originally Posted by TonyP View Post
    My back hurts just looking at this picture.
    Meh - those bales don't weigh an ounce over 10 lbs. ; )

  6. #606
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Give yourself a little room, grip both loops of twine with one hand and with a swing, a push from your free hand and a little practice you can throw the bales practically so they stack themselves. Haying season was one of summer's highlights when I was a pup.
    Tom Ambros

  7. #607
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    I always use hooks when hauling hay.
    Jay Dwight

  8. #608
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Quote Originally Posted by Tom View Post
    Give yourself a little room, grip both loops of twine with one hand and with a swing, a push from your free hand and a little practice you can throw the bales practically so they stack themselves. Haying season was one of summer's highlights when I was a pup.
    Same for me but I never thought of handling bales as the highlight. Riding on (and jumping off) the tractor all day, riding down the road on a stack of bales in the back of a farm truck … which makes me shudder now to think of the danger … being sweaty and dirty and appreciated for hard work by a bunch of joke cracking local guys I looked up to, including my dad, those were my highlights. Getting up the day after it was done and knowing I could ride my motorcycle again.
    Dan Fuller, local bicycle enthusiast

  9. #609
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    No one tell OSHA, but as a kid, I'd load hay in the fields, sometimes with a cousin, sometimes alone, with a low flatbed trailer behind a 40s vintage Farmall Model B. I would put the tractor in first gear, idle the engine, bungie the steering wheel, and jump off to pick up bales as it putted across the field. At the end of rows, I'd jump on to turn around, then stop to stack bales before proceeding. I was doing this age 10-18. Considering the equipment my grandfather had, the newest of which was from the 60s, I feel lucky to have made it to adulthood with all my limbs.
    Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
    Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com

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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    The first hay truck my dad had was a Chevy flatbed from some time in the late 40s. Bad clutch, sketchy brakes and the youngest and smallest sibling driving it. Vermont fields, often on a steep angle to the woods. There were a couple of times my sisters aged 12 or 13 would perform impressive feats of driving, turning the truck off the downhill when it didn't much feel like stopping before the woods without dumping the load of bales and whatever older sib was up there stacking. That truck was gone before I came along so I never had that thrill.

    My earliest musical training was baling hay. The baler had a two cylinder air cooled Wisconsin 35 horse engine with no muffler. That set the key. The plunger set the bottom of the rhythm ramming the hay into the chamber to pack the bales, the pickup reel going tick-tick-tick when the bent teeth came around, the dogs were the tom-toms on the alternate beat from the plunger and they had a great sound on the drawback when they caused all the loose sheet metal guards to pop and rattle. The knotter would do a neat end of measure ka-doop-cha-pop.
    The whole thing would slow and shift down tones when it got loaded, the tractor would resolve to the tonic when you turned up the hill and its engine would load. After three or four hours of that in the hot sun you were just about hypnotized.
    Tom Ambros

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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    First gear on farm tractors is made for slow motion autopilot as you work alongside it, as far as I'm concerned. A clear risk of being maimed and higher productivity in equal measures. For some reason that never bothered me as much as the truck rides on wobbly stacks of hay, which spooked me enough that I would grab at a wooden bed rail if I could.

    Now I look at my dad's little Deere with all of the stickers showing arms twisted like noodles around PTO shafts, etc. I wonder how many people stood under loaded buckets before someone decided that wasn't a good idea.
    Dan Fuller, local bicycle enthusiast

  12. #612
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    I helped pay for our horse board by mucking stalls and tossing bales into the barn loft after school. I get it.

    No hooks for us and I'm pretty sure no gloves.

    Bill is in the zone. I've gone soft.

    All I did today was change the backplane on a 30 amp RV power post.

  13. #613
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Quote Originally Posted by Too Tall View Post
    All I did today was change the backplane on a 30 amp RV power post.
    I'm adding another 30A outlet and a 20A duplex GFCI outlet. it's a 100A box, that completes it.
    Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
    Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com

  14. #614
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Here's to the good old days: 1959
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    Jay Dwight

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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Us Jeepers used to covet and install a Ford T-18 transmission for its wicked low 1st gear. I was told that ratio was that low so farmers could walk next to their moving vehicles to do chores. We did it just to show off!

  16. #616
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Quote Originally Posted by Trabri View Post
    Us Jeepers used to covet and install a Ford T-18 transmission for its wicked low 1st gear. I was told that ratio was that low so farmers could walk next to their moving vehicles to do chores. We did it just to show off!
    AKA "stump pulling gear". Same for that era Chevy trucks. I had people tell me about growing up on a farm and doing this. Tie off the steering wheel to the vent window post and set the throttle. Mine made a lovely noise from the cut gear.

  17. #617
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    For Jorn’s barn.



    rw saunders
    hey, how lucky can one man get.

  18. #618
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    Quote Originally Posted by rwsaunders View Post
    For Jorn’s barn.

    ...
    I'll make space!!

    When I was looking at tractors, someone in CT actually had a modern Lamborghini listed for sale with front loader. By size it is a relatively small tractor, but Lamborghini puts a 50hp (most are 25-35hp in the compact class due to emissions) diesel in it. They also set them up with larger front tires than most of the Asian tractor companies selling in the US, making them more of a utility tractor (which I ended up getting) than a lawn mowing tractor (which most people buy.) Nice tractors. Would be tough to find things that it couldn't do.

    Jorn Ake
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  19. #619
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    September. Standing deadwood ash fell over. Looked like a small tree lying down without its crown, but the trunk was actually pretty thick and other than the first 3' the wood was nice and solid.



    Jorn Ake
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  20. #620
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    Default Re: Hand Tools and Machinery for Country Living

    When we relocate to Wyoming next spring, a tractor is on the "need" list. Our home will be in Worland and I know the local tractor dealer, because it's a small town. There are a couple of Kioti models I like but he can also get me a Kubota or keep an eye on the auction world. I want a front loader, shredder/mower deck, and a box scraper. We have a bunch of downed Russian Olives that need dragging out of the tree line before we can cut them up and burn them. If you put Russian Olives in a chipper, you are just distributing new trees because the chipper doesn't destroy the olives. Ripley got it right, "I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
    Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
    Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com

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