After bush hogging for 4 hours, why not, yes I did pressure wash my tractor. If only I had a 55 gallon drum of armor all for the tires.
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I’m not a complete monster!Last I checked, they were still minting pennies!
I also thought it would be good for hay.Nice weed free field. Doesn't anyone around there have any animals they eat grass? That would make perfect hay for later.
I would think there would be a local farmer that would have done the work for the hay, saving you the work, With the drought here in PA, the poor second cutting of hay may leave farmers short.I also thought it would be good for hay.
But, I don’t anything about hay, except it’s expensive at the big box stores.
The owner also lives out of state.
I was nearly 12 at the time they were supposed to be set in, LOL. I can remember most of the events depicted in Forrest Gump too well.You make me Google that movie @Old_Paint
(Slingbkade) I was 12 when it came out lol
Your approach to the "situation" is admirable. Keeping a level head as a boss is underratedsewer line repair...turned into a water line repair too . One of the young guys jumped into the machine and started digging when I walked to the truck...so I let him continue all the while telling him to stay the the right because I figured we'd cross the water line.
I was right. No big deal.
Young guy digging: note that he's smiling. This is prior to snagging the water line
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repairs:
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backfilling
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done for the day
The closer you get to North Dakota the cheaper it gets.Where did you find drill stem for $85 a stick?
My fence contractor has been negotiating from $150/stick down to $105/stick for about a year.
I need 1712 linear feet just for top rail.
That’s a Leader, not a Boss!Your approach to the "situation" is admirable. Keeping a level head as a boss is underrated
Bingo
I’d try 15 in the rear. That’s where mine are. Dealership had them set at 40psi which was only slightly better than an old Farmall with spiked steel wheels. Wouldn’t drop the front any more. Fronts get a good bit of sideways pressure on them at times turning and pushing them off the rim is kind of irritating. Also improves traction. Just a suggestion…I dropped the air pressure in my R4 tires.
When I brought my 2601 home, the tires were maxed out at 36 front, and 40 rear. Mowing with it made my old zero turn feel like a Cadillac.
I dropped them down to 30 front and 30 rear and then mowed a different part of the property with it. It was better but still jarring on every bump.
It's now down to 20 front and 20 rear. The tractor is set up and used as a mowing tractor so it doesn't have a front end loader, or a BH. So, it's the stock weight except for the 54 inch MMM.
Hopefully the ride will improve.
Well, I don't know how to double quote you all, but, I'm not the boss. I'm just a hired hand for these jobs (although, I do sleep with the GM if that counts... she's my wife of 28 years so I think I'm ok).Bingo
I’d try 15 in the rear. That’s where mine are. Dealership had them set at 40psi which was only slightly better than an old Farmall with spiked steel wheels. Wouldn’t drop the front any more. Fronts get a good bit of sideways pressure on them at times turning and pushing them off the rim is kind of irritating. Also improves traction. Just a suggestion…
Thanks for the suggestion. I will drop the rear tires down to 15.I’d try 15 in the rear. That’s where mine are. Dealership had them set at 40psi which was only slightly better than an old Farmall with spiked steel wheels. Wouldn’t drop the front any more. Fronts get a good bit of sideways pressure on them at times turning and pushing them off the rim is kind of irritating. Also improves traction. Just a suggestion…
If you’re moving you might find North Carolina attractive. Not exactly sure why that would be but seems like half the world has decided to move here and pile up on top of each other so either there’s something wonderful here or the rest of the planet kind of sucks; not sure which it is.Did absolutely nothing, except hunt for a possible new forever home for us and it.
Get outta my head.If you’re moving you might find North Carolina attractive. Not exactly sure why that would be but seems like half the world has decided to move here and pile up on top of each other so either there’s something wonderful here or the rest of the planet kind of sucks; not sure which it is.
For the currently low bargain sale price of only $550,000 you can pre-buy one of the planned 800 semi-custom homes in one of the two developments on our north/west/south border and save yourself all kinds of time by having a yard you can mow in 20 minutes with an electric weed eater. You wouldn’t have to worry about making decisions about how to run your property either; between the city and HOA they’ll make all those decisions for you. Of course you’ll have to pay them for their service of managing your life but I’m sure that’s a good deal being most folks don’t have enough sense to know what color to paint their house or how long their grass should be or what species shrubs to plant.
There might be a little downside that you’d have one tree farmer neighbor that can’t be annexed into the city so that a$$hole will semi-routinely be doing irritating stuff like shooting guns, running noisy equipment, screaming around recklessly on a UTV, and running off suburbanites that think any place with more than three trees is a public park.
I don’t really know what in the world is attractive about any of that. Also don’t know what these people are doing around here where there’s a big demand for $550k to $750k houses. Seems to be attractive to a whole mess of folks who can afford them so I guess I’m the oddball.
Anyway, good luck with your search. I’d stay away from here unless your looking for an overpriced postage stamp lot with a house you can customize by picking one of three choices for carpet color.