Looked at my snowblower today. I think it's calling for the tractor......
@NCL4701 i feel like the same thing is happening here. It seems like there is still at least a third of the leaves left on the trees. I cant remember so many leaves still being on the canopy this late in the season.
Right ?! that's practically scientific right there , well done! I think it's a conspiracyHere in NJ
Not mine but used from known source, but November has been nicer than October the last few yearsRight ?! that is scientific evidence right there, well done! I think it's a conspiracy
great picture too
Have thought about retiring my old lever binders in favor of ratchet binders (only every time I load the tractor which is infrequent). Those EZ binders looked really sweet until I looked at the price. I know you’re loading and unloading constantly so I’m sure they make sense but for my infrequent use I got some bad sticker shock on those things. I’m up off the floor now but still recovering.I wasn't going to post this, but, maybe you'll get a laugh.
This was a new sewer line connection. The ground was really wet so I knew it would get torn up.
Start:
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The dig. found an old foundation. After hammering, used the 1 foot bucket to break it out.
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Street connection made. Test plugs installed for the inspector (who came 2.5 hours late).
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That made us start backfilling around dark...and those results speak for themselves
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Still going...
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After loading up, I was afraid of what it would look like in the morning. I asked the guys to send me a pic the next day so I could see how bad it was. I wasn't disappointed. The image is pretty much what I expected to see. The proverbial "bomb" went off in the front yard!
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I'll have to go back and clean it up. Sucks.
5 Stars for the EZ binders! they were much easier to cinch up in the dark too!
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I would agree. They weren't inexpensive at $118. I have other types of binders (lever and ratchet binders) and find that I typically overtighten the ratchet type. If you like the ratchet style, I'd recommend the "peerless ratchet" with folding handle. They are reasonably built and priced.Have thought about retiring my old lever binders in favor of ratchet binders (only every time I load the tractor which is infrequent). Those EZ binders looked really sweet until I looked at the price. I know you’re loading and unloading constantly so I’m sure they make sense but for my infrequent use I got some bad sticker shock on those things. I’m up off the floor now but still recovering.
I tried to install a steel discharge chute on my zero turn rider but couldn’t figure out how the spring works…if you or anyone knows how please explain…I see no grooves or anything to keep tension on the spring.If you did something to or on you're tractor today and you don't want to start a new thread then post it here
I installed a horn I took from a tiny Toyota and then installed a decompression cable on mine today. Was going to do a little grading on the drive but got tired
Gurn
beautiful country you live in!I 've been real concerned about the 30 to 50% higher home heating costs for this winter I've been hearing about, until I remembered I heat for free, and have for 40 years! I dragged this deadfall quaky about 1/4 mile from where I dragged it out across the creek, then the tractor's FEL was handy for holding it while I cut it into shorter lengths, and for moving the finished product into the shop near the wood boiler. The snowblower provided some extra rear counterweight, and it may be needed any day. View attachment 70017 View attachment 70016 View attachment 70015
"A man who cuts his own firewood is twice warmed" Ben Franklin I believe said that, true story. I can actually heat for free using just my electric boiler, which ties in with the wood boiler system, because I have a large surplus of KWH's with my utility thanks to my grid tied wind, solar, and hydro electric systems. But I like keeping my little stretch of "forest" looking tidy, and a half tipped over deadfall (on new trees especially) offends me, so I may as well burn them for heat, and the L3301 is an invaluable helper.Hauled some firewood to the house and hoped it would snow enough to try my new plow, but it didn't.
Not cold enough yet anyway. I wait until the ground is froze so I don't plow all kinds of dirt into my lawns.
You got it made it sounds like. I once looked into solar power here but in my area all the research I did came back saying I would not break even on investment for 30 years."A man who cuts his own firewood is twice warmed" Ben Franklin I believe said that, true story. I can actually heat for free using just my electric boiler, which ties in with the wood boiler system, because I have a large surplus of KWH's with my utility thanks to my grid tied wind, solar, and hydro electric systems. But I like keeping my little stretch of "forest" looking tidy, and a half tipped over deadfall (on new trees especially) offends me, so I may as well burn them for heat, and the L3301 is an invaluable helper.
That is why I only cut wood if it is in the 30's or below."A man who cuts his own firewood is twice warmed"
The first time is when you are sweating cutting and splitting it! LOL