Standing on the shoulders of giants. Giants with dirt under their nails
Some places need to be wild
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Some places need to be wild
Nails are sold by the pound, that makes sense.
Soluna Garden Farm -- Flower CSA -- plants, and cut flowers at our Boston Public Market location, Boston, Massachusetts.
Eric Hanson wrote:Travis,
I LOVE THE FLAIL MOWER AS WELL. I like sex better, but otherwise I agree completely. I had one on my older tractor and I have every intent of getting a new one for my current tractor.
The model I have in mind is the Woodmaxx 5’ hydraulic offset model. I figure this gives me a good option for mowing right up next to my living hedge and mowing slightly into the hedge without getting a face full of hedge. It will also be ideally sized for mowing trails and still small enough to operate in the woods if I have to.
Eric
Sometimes the answer is nothing
Eric Hanson wrote:D Nickols,
I agree wholeheartedly with your thoughts about the PTO woodchipper. At times I have been tempted to get one for my tractor. I saw an 8” model by Woodmaxx that looks like it would be just right for my tractor.
But I cannot justify it, and instead I rent a stand-alone Diesel powered 12” model about once per year. My experience in woodchippers is that you want a chipper whose capacity is about twice the size of the brush you are going to be chipping up.
I used to rent a 7” chipper for chipping up my brush (max diameter about 5-6 inches in diameter). This should theoretically work, but in practice it is slow going. That 7” model rents for $150 a day and takes 2 days to go through my brush piles. Inevitably, something on it breaks, just through the course of normal action. Now I rent a 12” model that is a beast, easily chewing through my brush in a single day and it does not break. Either way I spend $300, but I actually get my chipping done in 1 day with the larger model where I only get Part way finished with the smaller model before it inevitably breaks—frustrating!
I also like having the option of using my tractor to help load logs into the chipper which I cannot do if the chipper is attached to the tractor. Finally, and perhaps a bit paranoid on my part, I have to wonder about the abrupt strains I would be putting on my transmission if I was running on the PTO.
Increasingly, it is hard to imagine a scenario where I would get s chipper for my tractor.
These are all just my thoughts and if they are helpful to you, then great. If your circumstances dictate otherwise, by all means, do what is best for you.
Love the discussion,
Eric
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Some places need to be wild
Travis Johnson wrote:I learned my lesson when I owned my small bulldozer; I got a lot of work done with it...when it was running that is. Honestly, every time I really needed to do some major job with it, it seemed something was broke on it. None of it was major, but there was two days of operating it, and one day of work to get it back running. And it was a really nice bulldozer too.
It really is a catch twenty two, if you rent a piece of equipment, you have no maintenance issues with that machine, just use it, fuel, and call them if it breaks. That is really nice, BUT it also means you are pretty much renting it for one job, and one job alone. Ownership is nice in that you have it, and so you can use it anytime, and really do a ton of work with it that you never thought you would do with it, just because you do have it.
I am not sure where the cut-off is. Someone told me that if you borrow something more than three times: buy one for yourself. Well I have rented a lot of bulldozers and excavators and so I am not so sure that Law of Borrowing holds true.
Thoughts???
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Carla Burke wrote:Right now, I'd give damn near anything for an auger or jackhammer! I'm tired of trying to dig post holes, or drive posts, into un-disturbed, rocky ground!
Travis Johnson wrote:
Carla Burke wrote:Right now, I'd give damn near anything for an auger or jackhammer! I'm tired of trying to dig post holes, or drive posts, into un-disturbed, rocky ground!
A post hole auger might not work for you then. They really do not work well in rocky ground because the auger has a hard time churning through the soil. A Tractor Mounted PTO Post Hole Auger is even worse because it cannot reverse, so if it jambs in the hole, and you might not be able to pick it up, or get it unstuck.
I can mount an auger to my log trailer which is okay. I can swing that thing anywhere in a circle, and with it being what it is, I can reverse the auger. Still it does not work that good. Most of the time I just use my backhoe if I need a hole in a specified spot. (Like holes for the posts on a pole barn for instance where they need to be in a very specified spot).
But I am not without suggestions to help your out Carla. For driving fence posts, I wait until spring when the ground is really wet, right after the frost gets out of the ground. When that occurs, I take a string and make a straight line, then measure out my posts. My fence posts are 16 feet on center, but that is just my farm. Then I start a hole with a lining bar. Then I put a big rock, or fill my bucket of my tractor with dirt. With all that weight in it, I can sink my 6 foot fence posts right down to the 50 inch mark which is perfect for 48 inch sheep fence. No swinging a sledge hammer. No fancy implements, just weight in the bucket of my tractor. With fence posts, you really want to drive them in anyway, not drill a hole and then refill the hole around the post. Doing the latter means you will be pounding them back in every year, drive them in, and they are in tight for life.
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Standing on the shoulders of giants. Giants with dirt under their nails
“The most important decision we make is whether we believe we live in a friendly or hostile universe.”― Albert Einstein
Perry Overton wrote:Eric,
I have thought about the pallet forks, they are reasonably priced just didn't think I could use them except to move pallets. Good to know. Thanks!
“The most important decision we make is whether we believe we live in a friendly or hostile universe.”― Albert Einstein
Standing on the shoulders of giants. Giants with dirt under their nails
Tj Jefferson wrote:Travis you would suck at it. You are too honest to tell the weekender he needs a 75hp monster.
Do it!!! I wish our local tractor place had such a resource.
Standing on the shoulders of giants. Giants with dirt under their nails
Tj Jefferson wrote:“I just do not feel I am fast at it.”
Neither are out local mechanics. They charge by the hour. And they aren’t honest. You would be a step up.
'Theoretically this level of creeping Orwellian dynamics should ramp up our awareness, but what happens instead is that each alert becomes less and less effective because we're incredibly stupid.' - Jerry Holkins
Standing on the shoulders of giants. Giants with dirt under their nails
“All good things are wild, and free.” Henry David Thoreau
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." --Mahatma Gandhi
"Preach the Gospel always, and if necessary, use words." --Francis of Assisi.
"Family farms work when the whole family works the farm." -- Adam Klaus
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." --Mahatma Gandhi
"Preach the Gospel always, and if necessary, use words." --Francis of Assisi.
"Family farms work when the whole family works the farm." -- Adam Klaus
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