Gordon Gould
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2007
- Messages
- 6,719
- Location
- NorthEastern, VT
- Tractor
- Kubota L3010DT, Kubota M5640SUD, Dresser TD7G Dozer
Maybe he took the cover off to show us?
Yes - Thanks for assuming that I have some common sense.
gg
Maybe he took the cover off to show us?
I have one, I’m sure I’ll use it some after we get moved in and things settle downI think if I had a place like that on my land I would have to buy a metal detector and do some searching. You never know what you might find. Probably a lot of worthless junk but maybe some cool stuff too.
Plenty of it around here, I'm about 45 miles northeast of Appomatox. My son lives 10 minutes from the Petersburg battlefield with the crater.I find Civil War history fascinating, and it’s cool to be able to visit the sites where it took place and still contain many of the structures that were there at the time.
German?Interesting stuff there. Have you been to the Stonewall Jackson shrine in Guinea Station VA ? It’s cool to see the bed that he laid on when he passed, and the clock up on the mantle, that was there and still marks the time that he made it to the hereafter.
That old house does look like a slave cabin and is similar to one I’ve seen, that is open to the public, at the Bushong farm in New Market VA:
View attachment 2976216
I find Civil War history fascinating, and it’s cool to be able to visit the sites where it took place and still contain many of the structures that were there at the time.
Old graveyards are cool too. Our kids are the 8th generation of our family to live on our farm, way up north, near the Canadian border. It’s pretty neat to be able to ride our bikes over to the cemetery, just around the corner, and see the markers of our ancestors. That of my great great great great grandfather, born in 1790, is the one there with the oldest legible date. View attachment 2976217
Yes, he and his brother sailed over here from Germany and he homesteaded our upstate NY farm, around the year 1825.German?
Well I did say "Maybe"Yes - Thanks for assuming that I have some common sense.
gg
I reconnected with a distant relative showing up on his doorstep in Germany about 25 years ago… his side and my side trace back to 2 brothers born in the late 1700’s… one brother his side and the other my side…Yes, he and his brother sailed over here from Germany and he homesteaded our upstate NY farm, around the year 1825.
There is still a town in Germany with our family name. Someday, after I retire, I may get over there and check it out. Not sure if any of my relatives are still around over there.
I have such a hand-dug well in front of my garage, laid up with creek rocks. I have it covered over with large rocks and a circle of Peonies planted around the well, so it's never ran over by accident.It's only about 18" in diameter. They must have dug it out big enough for a man and then laid the rock and back filled the perimeter on the way up. It is a little over 15' deep.
gg
My understanding is that they should be filled in to protect the water table from possible surface contamination. It also reduces the potential hazard to wildlife and humans.You really want to either cover or fill that well.
I filled a shallow well on my property. I used sand because I figured it would be easier to shovel than gravel. Even with the assistance of my tractor it was a bit of work.A friend bought a house with an old well, and the insurance company made them fill it in. It took several dump truck loads of gravel. At 10 yards per load, just think how much work it took to dig that out by hand.
I can only imagine!......just think how much work it took to dig that out by hand.
The person removing it wanted more money after it was on the ground, because he lost money he was expecting from the wood—only got firewood from if no lumber
Without cutting it down and counting the rings, I think you might be off on how old that tree is. My land was cleared by the US Army in 1942 to build a Training Base for soldiers going to WW2. Every tree was removed.there are a couple really big oak trees by the old shack that I find impressive. No idea how old they are but I'd have to guess at least a couple hundred years.
interesting, I'll have to do some measuring and research. Maybe the pic doesn't do them justice, or maybe I'm just way off.Without cutting it down and counting the rings, I think you might be off on how old that tree is. My land was cleared by the US Army in 1942 to build a Training Base for soldiers going to WW2. Every tree was removed.
Since closing the base in 1945, the trees have been cleared for farming, but not all of them, and some are probably from 1945. None are any older than that, and I have quite a few oak trees that are as big as yours, with a couple that are quite a bit bigger.