Mike476
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2010
- Messages
- 1,080
- Location
- Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia
- Tractor
- MF 135 Z134 Continental, MF 1660 Cab
Made it home recently for three weeks. Drove the 1600 kms (1000 miles) in one day, didn't want to spend too much time on the road. It was a busy three weeks but I can't honestly remember enjoying time with my family more. My wife and two daughters were right there with me when they weren't working, great sense of accomplishment. Proper thing though, they're the horse people I just get to play around doing this sort of thing ;o)
I'm no master carpenter by any means, had the help of a lot of friends too, particularly when it came to swinging trusses, shingling the roof etc. Wouldn't have got it done without their help.
Day 1 at home I had to move the old hay storage shed I had built, my daughter got the chance to put a couple of hours on our new MF 1660 I had delivered my first day home. With the shed moved I had to knock a couple of maples down that were right where we wanted the building. Hated doing it, we try to keep as many of the mature trees on the property that we can.
Once they were down I cut them into lengths for milling, cleared the brush and had a friend come with his hoe to pull the stumps. Once the stumps were pulled we cleaned up all the roots.
Day 2 I had three loads of sand delivered, levelled it with the tractor, compacted it and started laying block. I wanted the building to be large enough for four 10X12 stalls and storage for a years worth of hay for our 4 horses. Decided on a 28 X 40, 10 foot wall on block style construction. Pressure treated 6x6 sill on a course of inverted starter coarse shingles to keep it from touching the concrete.




I'm no master carpenter by any means, had the help of a lot of friends too, particularly when it came to swinging trusses, shingling the roof etc. Wouldn't have got it done without their help.
Day 1 at home I had to move the old hay storage shed I had built, my daughter got the chance to put a couple of hours on our new MF 1660 I had delivered my first day home. With the shed moved I had to knock a couple of maples down that were right where we wanted the building. Hated doing it, we try to keep as many of the mature trees on the property that we can.
Once they were down I cut them into lengths for milling, cleared the brush and had a friend come with his hoe to pull the stumps. Once the stumps were pulled we cleaned up all the roots.
Day 2 I had three loads of sand delivered, levelled it with the tractor, compacted it and started laying block. I wanted the building to be large enough for four 10X12 stalls and storage for a years worth of hay for our 4 horses. Decided on a 28 X 40, 10 foot wall on block style construction. Pressure treated 6x6 sill on a course of inverted starter coarse shingles to keep it from touching the concrete.



