Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #74,881  
funny I was chuckling about that thinking of him asking his wife to sit on the pallet for more weight...though some kids would find that great fun until someone got hurt.
I've got it, a nice recliner on the pallet for his wife, so she can ride along and helpfully advise Buckeye on how to better drive his tractor. This I would like to see...:D
Good thing i saw this After i was done dragging the pallet , or it wouldhave been "Honey, can you come here a minute and sit on this pallet". Then after i picked myself up........

But i did have to add a couple concrete blocks for weight. And i forgot to take pictures.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #74,882  
Found out the 2" receiver on the ranger would not take my 2" hitch. Would not slide back. Felt inside the receiver, there is some angle to the inside, like it gets smaller in the back.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #74,883  
A few days ago we had a conversation about various glyphosate herbicide brands and their effectiveness and how long they last.

I got busy and didn’t have a chance to respond.

Glyphosate:

The primary ingredient is obviously glyphosate, a systemic non-selective herbicide. A dilutable product that starts out in the range of 40-42% diluted to 4-6% in water will result in an effective kill of almost anything it contacts. The glyphosate is taken in thru leaves and stems and moves to the root system, it’s real target. Use of a surfactant increases the effectiveness significantly. Glyphosate has no soil activity so, no long term effect and its broken down fairly quickly by microbes in your soil.

Imazapyr

Imazapyr is added to some products to extend time of effective kill. Imazapyr does have soil activity, unlike glyphosate, and does not get broken down by soil microbes as fast as the glyphosate does.

Diquat:

A few glyphosate products also include Diquat. It is a contact herbicide and quickly “burns” the target plant to give you “quick gratification. It does nothing to improve or extend the effectiveness of the glyphosate, it just makes you feel like you accomplished something quicker.

Hopefully this will help as you evaluate various products.

Here is the Label for the RM43 that I use. Note that the active ingredients are;

Glyphosate - 43.68%.

Imazapyr - 0.78%


https://www3.epa.gov/pesticides/chem_search/ppls/084009-00003-20150710.pdf

If you take the course work and become a Private Applicator, you will always Remember;

1. Read The Label!

2. The Label is the Law!

Knowingly using these products in a manner contrary to the Label is a federal crime.

Thanks Rick.

Now if only there was an organic way to kill the nutsedge in my vegetable garden.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #74,884  
   / Good morning!!!! #74,885  
Good day...chipper (a Woods 5000 chipper/shredder) has been sold and the backhoe is mounted on the tractor...ready to load on the buyer's trailer tomorrow or Tuesday.
The chipper/shredder is being replaced with a Woodmaxx 8H chipper
 
   / Good morning!!!! #74,886  
Good day...chipper (a Woods 5000 chipper/shredder) has been sold and the backhoe is mounted on the tractor...ready to load on the buyer's trailer tomorrow or Tuesday.
The chipper/shredder is being replaced with a Woodmaxx 8H chipper

You will like that 8H. Son and grandson came over today. Put my chipper on tractor and chipped everything 5” and smaller. No lost gloves or banged up arms. My 22 pro hp tractor cannot do much over 5”. Your larger tractor should work good. But not sure if a green one will works as well as a orange one.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #74,887  
You will like that 8H. Son and grandson came over today. Put my chipper on tractor and chipped everything 5” and smaller. No lost gloves or banged up arms. My 22 pro hp tractor cannot do much over 5”. Your larger tractor should work good. But not sure if a green one will works as well as a orange one.

If it helps...I bought the chipper with orange paint...
 
   / Good morning!!!! #74,889  
Washed the truck early this morning in the cool, boy did it need it after all the pollen.
Then worked on garden soaker lines and got everything working including building
a little dam at the bottom since no sense wasting the water. Still have another fifty feet of row, but wanted to keep
the water up where it was needed. I'll just knock the little dam down if/when I find something else to plant all the way at the bottom of the row.

Then I hilled the potatoes again, and now done doing doing that, and took the hiller discs off. Unhappy about finding a grease zerk on the disc I had
never seen before. Now well lubed...it sucked up a lot of grease too. But once the discs were off I tried to install the cultivator forks.
A big no go. Even adjusting the attachment as far up as it would go, with the hydraulics at the max top, the bottoms of the four tines are in the dirt.
Something is off, I'm doing something clearly way wrong, there should be lots more clearance, unless these cultivators were not meant to go here.
Though the mounts fit perfectly...

Any of you guys who grew up with these things, any ideas? The rear linkage goes way far up, so I think the hydraulics are just fine, and it's so far off it can't be
an inch of adjustment. Well I ran the tractor then for two hours with just the rear V discs chewing up the earth right behind the tires, which was good as the corn furrows were full of weeds.
Did the whole field, corn and potatoes, looked much better when I was done.
A bit tuckered out.

Around lunchtime I set all my tomatoes and peppers out on the back porch to get some indirect light under the umbrella. This is day four of hardening.
Much to my dismay on returning at 4:30pm I find the green umbrella out in the lawn, having down a light air Mary Poppins I guess and all my little tomatoes were like
new nudists on the beach in Aruba without sunscreen. It was brutal, I think I lost about half of them. Even the peppers weren't happy but most looked like they would make it.
I brought them all in for a siesta day tomorrow, clearly way too much fun in the sun today.
 

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