Speaking of basics. It is always said:, "you can hold a ton on a string if you apply it slow enough."
We went to the pond this morning with some old, used, nylon baling twine, a milk jug, and a rag with a little
copper sulfate in it. I got on the end of the dam and my wife unrolled the cord out to the opposite side. She tied the milk jug and bag on in about the middle. We raised it up and walked toward the other end. When we got to where the floating stuff was we let the bottle and rag down into the water and started dragging it toward the other end. It kept getting
harder to pull as the mat was being collected by the string. Finally had to go back and get leather gloves for both of us so the twine didn't cut our hands. When we got to the other end we came together and a massive amount of weed was collected along the string like collecting an oil spill. So back for rakes, pitchfork, and the tractor while she got in the edge and started throwing the stuff up on the bank. Then I put it in the loader by the pitchfork full.
She had her walkie-talkie in her well endowed T-shirt pocket and it skied out into the water. But we found it. Letting it dry in the sun but it probably is shot.
The loader bucket is 6 feet wide x 32" deep so quite a haul on a little piece of twine.
I have some 1/2" or bigger nylon rope around here somewhere. I think we will "belay" the ends, one to the tractor and one to the little green deere. She can drive the deere across the dam as I move slowly along the other side with the tractor.
Probably tie 2-3 milk jugs on the line to keep it slightly submerged. A few trips that way should get rid of a lot of the weed without using chemicals.:thumbsup:
Ron