Spent about an hour yesterday after work moving firewood logs. I do work now and then for the guy I use to run a log skidder for and sometimes he pays me with a load of cull logs. I moved about half of the load.
At first glance I thought you were working a food plot or field of some sort at your place! Nice!View attachment 84717
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Leveled some parking lot before it got too hot on the MX5100 at work.
Lol, nope. Just some gravel that people like to do donuts in.At first glance I thought you were working a food plot or field of some sort at your place! Nice!
With the top link, I'd venture to say the collapsed length is almost more important than extended length. If you can't shorten the link enough, you will have a difficult time cutting with the box blade and rake.Hydraulic top link showed up. I opted for the 20"-32" link vs. the 18"-26" link to accommodate the Pats QH I have installed.
That's a good point, I think I'll be ok since the Pats adds about 3"-4" of length to the lower bars and my current top link on the LX with the BB rear blades completely level is at a full 26" (almost fully extended). I should have 6" of capacity to tilt inward and 5" to tilt outward with the new hydro link.With the top link, I'd almost venture to say the collapsed length is almost more important than extended length. If you can't shorten the link enough, you will have a difficult time cutting with the box blade and rake.
Man, that's artwork right there.View attachment 84717
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Leveled some parking lot before it got too hot on the MX5100 at work.
Well damn... I have to grind the sleeve down too I guess, the sleeve is also too wide for the LX2610 top link bracket... Kubota really dropped the ball on this one. I should have checked the bracket width so I could have taken material off of both sides uniformly with the belt sander. I guess I'll have to use an angle grinder and a file at home tomorrow.Used the Kalamazoo belt sander to quickly take material off. Took about 3/16" of material off to get the link to fit.
Before:
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After:
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Land planes are freaking awesome in gravel. Literally, drop and drive.Man, that's artwork right there.
Awesome property! I'd plant some clover, mint, or milkweed. All of those are great for bees and clover doesn't really need mowing. Milkweed is also great for Monarch butterflies.As a final follow up to last weekend's flail mower ordeal here's an aerial view of my work taken yesterday afternoon . My friend is a pilot for a very wealthy individual up here. He's also part owner of a very nice and very expensive Top Cub plane as well as being an active flight instructor. He sent me this photo last night of his property to tell me how pleased he is and that it looks great.
The lighter colored areas bordered by driveways on three sides and the river on one side are what I cut. Last year I also cut the 1+ acre along the river to the south of the houses shown at bottom center (kind of looking south in this photo). That lot was recently sold.
I would love to own this field or one like it. I would turn it into a hay field. My friend has river water rights so irrigation isn't an issue. We're trying to decide what to do with it to keep weeds down, and provide a good source of food for his bees. If it involves pulling a plow and disc harrow around I'm all in.
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Thanks. I'll Google those options.Awesome property! I'd plant some clover, mint, or milkweed. All of those are great for bees and clover doesn't really need mowing. Milkweed is also great for Monarch butterflies.
Just noticed you're in Indiana. Better put some traction pads on that stuff anywhere you're stepping close to the edge. Composite decking is slicker than greased monkey snot with frost on it. I used it on my front stoop and wound up going down 9 steps on my keester right after I tore my right rotator cuff. It looks great, and will last a long time, but take a few extra measures to insure traction on it. You'll thank me the first time you step out on it with frost on it.I will add more stakes then to be safe. I actually used leftover scraps of composite deck boards to make my stakes. Wasn’t sure how they would hold up to being beaten with a BFH but they held up great.
Here’s the latest progress on the deck and the Kubota digging the post holes with the Land Pride PD10. View attachment 84679 View attachment 84680
Hi - I had to have about 7 stairs replaced - they were curved-front. Original guy I hired had some steel forms for them, but after looking at his layout, even to my untrained eyes there was no way they'd take the pressure, weight and keep the proper shape, so paid him for his time and hired another contractor. For each step, he built a square frame (I think 2 x 6's) and staked the heck out of it. Then, inside the frame, he placed the curve, supported with a generous number of 2 x 6 struts connecting the curve piece to the frame. That may be overkill for a one-step landing, but it looks like a good-sized pour.I will add more stakes then to be safe. I actually used leftover scraps of composite deck boards to make my stakes. Wasn’t sure how they would hold up to being beaten with a BFH but they held up great.
Here’s the latest progress on the deck and the Kubota digging the post holes with the Land Pride PD10. View attachment 84679 View attachment 84680
Personally, I'd do sunflowers. There's a place near us that plants quite a few acres and has it set up as a business so people can wander in the fields,take pictures, has food vendors,etc. They let people cut the heads and charge $1 each flower. They have multiple different colored varieties( place is called Sunflowers of Sanborn)....As a final follow up to last weekend's flail mower ordeal here's an aerial view of my work taken yesterday afternoon . My friend is a pilot for a very wealthy individual up here. He's also part owner of a very nice and very expensive Top Cub plane as well as being an active flight instructor. He sent me this photo last night of his property to tell me how pleased he is and that it looks great.
The lighter colored areas bordered by driveways on three sides and the river on one side are what I cut. Last year I also cut the 1+ acre along the river to the south of the houses shown at bottom center (kind of looking south in this photo). That lot was recently sold.
I would love to own this field or one like it. I would turn it into a hay field. My friend has river water rights so irrigation isn't an issue. We're trying to decide what to do with it to keep weeds down, and provide a good source of food for his bees. If it involves pulling a plow and disc harrow around I'm all in.
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