Bill Guenthner
Platinum Member
The implement I’ve gotten the most value out of is my 3-point chipper. No more weed choked brush piles and no more burning. Worth every cent and then some.
Yep. The wiggle method works great with sackcrete as well. Just pour it in (dry), wiggle the post until it tightens up, check level then pile dirt around the post and tamp it down.Just pick up some gravel or crushed rock. Dump some around the post and wiggle it a bit. The rock/gravel is self tightening. The more you wiggle the post the tighter it gets. I learned this from the power companies in our area. They only set power posts with crushed rock.
Yeah, California is outlawing round bales…Large square bales are more popular in the PNW because of the export market. They take a 1000 lb. square bale, mash it to 1/3 the original volume with a high pressure press, then pack the results into shipping containers. There is a big export market for wheat straw and grass straw, not crops you grow a lot of in Missouri. I think there may be some shipped down the Big Muddy to the Middle East, but shipments to East Asia head right across the Pacific.
Yeah, California is outlawing round bales…
because the cows can’t get a square meal![]()
I did a drag job with a "pusher" out front:Two thumbs way up for the boom pole in conjunction with the drag. Now I can use it in forward and reverse, and at the end of a run if I lift it it would sweep back and up and feather any material piled under it nicely. View attachment 738508View attachment 738509
I've seen you post this before, which got me wondering how well a cattle gate attached to the bottom of my forks would behave as a "land plane" for loose material.I did a drag job with a "pusher" out front:
View attachment 738522View attachment 738523View attachment 738524