A while back on the Yahoo site there was a thread about the importance of properly fastening down your equipment while hauling on the highway, so I thought I'd pass on what happened at my place last Sunday afternoon. We live on a two-lane state highway where the average speed is considerably above the posted 55. We had just been home about 5 minutes when my wife said, "What are you doing with your tractor out front in the ditch?" Since I hadn't had any of my tractors out for several months, I was fairly sure it wasn't mine. When I looked out, there was one of the large John Deere garden tractors setting over the end of the culvert in our driveway. As we went out for a look, my wife asked where it had come from. I told her that I thought it must have come off of a passing truck or trailer. She said, "You mean that someone lost this and doesn't know it?" That question was quickly answered when a Dodge dually pick up with a flat-bed trailer (empty) came up the highway and turned into the drive. The guy was a contractor. He said that he had set the tractor brakes, but that the tilt bed had tilted and the tractor had rolled off! My only damage was a destroyed mailbox and post. He tried for a while to start the tractor, finally succeeding. However, the tractor wouldn't move. It was a hydrostat and one wheel was in the air, but it wouldn't move the wheel. I offered to get one of my tractors to pull him out, but he drove over to a buddy's place and they came back with a Kubota with a FEL. They had the tractor out in no time, but the JD was still immobile. They finally manually pushed the tractor back onto the trailer. This time they got out a chain and fastened the tractor to the front rail on the trailer and made sure the tilt bed was locked. He will be paying me for replacing my mailbox and post, but he is getting off very cheaply. Had that tractor veered into oncoming traffic instead of into my ditch, I hate to think what might have happened. I know I'm going to make doubly sure that my equuipment is securly fastened when I haul!