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#81 (permalink) |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Palermo, NY
Posts: 405
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Tony,
Great posts and great progress. Keep posting. While looking for some info on implements I bought a book titled " Hobby Farm" by Carol Ekarius. While it did not have in it what I was looking for, you may find it a good read. Also I enjoy my subscription to "Hobby Farms" magazine. Not only do they have some interesting articles, you really get to see what's out there for attachments and equipment in the ads. They had a great article a few months back on implements and their uses. Again, Keep posting! Great project.
__________________
Regards, Marcel Mahindra 4110 w/ ML112 FEL, Howse bush hog, PHD, King Kutter box blade Do these R4s make my tractor look fat? |
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#82 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Paola, KS
Posts: 62
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Great thread.
I am also working along similar lines with 20 acres here in KS. Most of my property is all wooded brush on a fairly gentle slope. I have a few comments/suggestions. 1. The pecan tree is very slow to grow and bear any nuts. You may be planting them for your boys to enjoy and not you. Which is fine also. 2. For the chickens you may want to start out with a chicken tractor. A small pen on wheels that you can move the chickens around in. You can park it on any part of the garden and they will eat up any weeds and bugs as well as cultivate their dodo into the soil for fertilizer. Many good examples on the net. 3. Consider getting some guineas. They are great for bug control. We had ticks so bad last year but with the guineas this year we found hardly a one. You can also eat their eggs. Good luck.
__________________
JD 4300 w/FEL, 6' LP Finish Mower, 6' LP Rear Blade, 5.5' LP Box Blade and Carryall. |
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#83 (permalink) | |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Northern Virginia
Posts: 2,641
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Quote:
-Mike Z. |
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#84 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Travelers Rest, SC
Posts: 622
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Marcel, thanks. I bought a "Hobby Farms" issue at the TSC back a few months ago. Found it to not have much of interest. Probably was just that particular issue. I'll probably subscribe to it and give it a year.
James, the chicken tractor is probably a good suggestion. I don't see any way I'll have all this fencing done in time. The tractor could be an easy way to get started and buy myself a few months if nothing else. It will be useful down the road anyhow to let the chickens go on little "field trips". I'm not familiar with guinieas. I'll do some research. Heck, if you can eat them then I suppose its worth trying. Not much going on at the farm right now. We're forecasted for some rain early next week. That will be my chance to get the last of my brush burned down. At that point I'll have a completely clean slate. I have been cutting firewood in the last week. A neat little trick for bucking logs that I figured out all on my own....use an appliance dolly to lift the big logs and keep them raised off the ground for cutting! Works just like a log jack. ![]() |
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#85 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Central, SC
Posts: 58
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they make excellent 'watchdogs' - and pretty to look at as far as yard birds go.
enjoying the post. J
__________________
1995 Kubota L2350DT - 5' finishing mower, 5' disk harrow. |
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#86 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Mariposa, CA
Posts: 22
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Tony - Like others said - you will discover it is smaller then you think. we have 6.75 acres and I am going to fence in a 1 acre area for fruits, vegetables and grapes. When I started looking at fruit tress I said OH NO!!! There is no was that I have enough room. Then we went on a local Ag-tour where some folks in our area opened their "hobby farms" for the weekend to visitors.
At one of those places, I was told about this nursery's website and how they plant fruit trees 4 to a raised box and "force dwarf" them. The idea is a tree planted and grown to orchard specs will give you WAY more fruit then you possibly can consume and it will all be at one time. This method gives you enough fruit for a family and it is spread out over the season - PLUS - it doesn't take all your property for a few trees! Hope you find it as enlightening as I did. Last edited by Don Melcher; 12-06-2007 at 11:05 PM. |
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#87 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Mariposa, CA
Posts: 22
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...and get a ROPS on that tractor, will ya' Tony. You need it with some of the slopes you got. I've almost rolled mine 3 or 4 times - very high pucker factor when you feel a wheel lift off the ground! I was looking at the "Tiltmeters" in the TBN store and I am going to buy Kermit (that's my JD 4310's name) one of those and a Pat's Easy Change for Christmas.
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#88 (permalink) |
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Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Foothills of the Giant Sequoia's, California
Posts: 5,798
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Tony,
Must be a good feeling to have a "clean slate". Mine is full and I have all of then to do at the same time. shees ... which one next. Let us know what you decide on the guineas. We will want to get some as soon as we can. I'd like to learn more about it too.
__________________
Rob- ...The Older I get...the Better I Used to be... |
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#89 (permalink) | |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: West Bell County, Texas
Posts: 768
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Quote:
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#90 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Western NC
Posts: 970
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Tony,
Here is a thread I had about guinea a while back. David http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/r...hlight=guineae |
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