Relocating the entire farm...

   / Relocating the entire farm...
  • Thread Starter
#21  
The last 2 times we moved, the first thing I did was call for a dumpster to be dropped off and emptied weekly. There were a few disagreements about what was needed but nothing serious. The dumpster rental was the best money we spent.
I've actually been pretty aggressively getting rid of stuff that's been in storage in the shop for 3 years recently. We don't have any trash service so I burn what's flammable, metal goes to the scrap yard and the rest gets buried deeply.

I'm going to move my stuff as I need it. Whatever I haven't needed to move in a year or so will probably get sold, left or trashed.

The household stuff, my wife's mostly, gets moved whether we need it or not, I'm not about to argue with her.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #22  
Nows a great time to move. There are a lot of"HOT SHOT" trailer guys looking for loads. They have 40' trailers pulled with F350's Dode 3500 etc. They get loaded about a $1.00 a mile. Same with animal haulers. Loads are down now and they work for a lot less.
Otherwise buy the longest flatbed trailer you can haul and do it load by load. You can rent an animal trailer or just have a truck and trailer come pick up the animals.
Easier than you think.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #23  
Tragedy Tree

I was born and raised in West Texas and boy was it flat and sparse. Moved to Alaska at 11 and have never looked back. Visited family in Camp Wood, Kerrville, San Antonio, Lometa and Lampasas. I liked all those areas and would also consider relocating. Finally, after 57 years I am weary of the cold, snow and darkness of winter. I am also ready for trees other than spruce.

Camp Wood is a small place. Blink and you miss it. But beautiful.

I might be headed that way in a couple of weeks. Kid is going to church camp.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #24  
Camp Wood is a small place. Blink and you miss it. But beautiful.

I might be headed that way in a couple of weeks. Kid is going to church camp.

I enjoyed what little time I spent in Camp Wood. I only met the Church Ladies and they were wonderful.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #25  
We've got 3 Nigerian Dwarfs goats, about 30 pigs at the moment but, that'll be 4 at most before we move, and more chickens than I can count. The goats and chickens aren't too bad, they just need a good shelter and a fenced yard, we let the chickens free range during the day.

The pigs, on the other hand, need excellent fencing and a few good sized pastures to rotate through, even with just 4, or they'll destroy the ground. They also need a wallow and some sort of shelter.

Pigs don't need much of a fence. An electric nose wire will teach them their boundaries, and after that they will never touch it.

The goats, on the other hand, need Trump's border wall, and will still get through it.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm...
  • Thread Starter
#26  
Pigs don't need much of a fence. An electric nose wire will teach them their boundaries, and after that they will never touch it.

The goats, on the other hand, need Trump's border wall, and will still get through it.
I've got a 13 joule charger on the pig's fence, they test it all the time.

Our little goats can be contained with 3' no climb fencing, as long as it's tight. If it's loose at all, they'll use that to their advantage and climb out.

All of the fencing I've installed has been 4' sheep and goat, it'll contain all of our animals well but, the pigs need the hotwire as well and I have to check their fence line weekly to clear the dirt they've rooted into the hotwire to ground it out.

Our pigs were born wild and domesticated by us. We've kept regular domestic pigs as well and these wild pigs are 100x smarter than a domestic pig, they constantly challenge you.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #27  
Depending on your ability to load and unload the equipment you might could find a company who runs empty from where you are to where you are moving to and get better rates than normal but you can load a lot on a 40 foot flatbed. For that distance you may well find someone who hauls livestock like that also.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #28  
If someone is hired to haul goods, someone has to be there to unload the trailer right away. Maybe many times. If you need to be there to unload then you might as well get a trailer and do it yourself and take your time.

I moved from WI to TN which was a 700 mile trip. I bought a 16K 28' gooseneck for the move. It took 7 trips and was a pain but I would do it again unless there was a time crunch. All day driving and unload the next day. Three hours would be a piece of cake. I threw about a load of metal and garage goods and items I knew I would never use again in the firepit or the recycle bin or goodwill.

For special thinks like animals a different mode would be needed.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm... #29  
Unless you have a class A license stick with a trailer that is stickered at 20K pounds because you can register it with farm tags and not have to have the class A license. DPS is not going to bust your chops on a slightly overloaded farm trailer as long as it does not look dangerous (look at all of the farmers hauling hay) but they will get you with a 26K trailer and no class A license.
 
   / Relocating the entire farm...
  • Thread Starter
#30  
Unless you have a class A license stick with a trailer that is stickered at 20K pounds because you can register it with farm tags and not have to have the class A license. DPS is not going to bust your chops on a slightly overloaded farm trailer as long as it does not look dangerous (look at all of the farmers hauling hay) but they will get you with a 26K trailer and no class A license.
You can actually go over 26,000 pounds with farm tags and no CDL. I've got a 28,000 pound dump truck with farm tags on it.

All but 1 of my trailers have farm tags, I keep the 1 with regular tags for non-farm stuff.

The roads between here and the new ranch aren't very well travelled since the pipelines have gone in and oil has dropped. The last few trips we've made, I haven't seen any DPS at all and only a couple of cops. I'll only have a couple of trips that'll need to be over 25,000 pounds though. The boom lift is 21,000 so once you add in the trailer and truck, I'll be at about 29,000 total. I'm going to need a bigger excavator as well, my 3500# mini-ex isn't going to cut it in the rock. A 12,000 - 14,000 pound excavator is going to weigh in around 20,000 pounds. And our fifth wheel is 18,000 pounds empty, the truck is 8,000 so it gets us to 26,000.

I guess I should technically get a non-commercial Class A to be 100% legal. As infrequently as I pull loads that heavy though, it seems like too much trouble and I haven't had any issues with DPS yet.
 

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