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A full week of burning? No water sources? Air Force bombs the entire town with chemicals? |
With 2 horses,a pony and a miniature donkey, we put in about 500 square bales for ourselves and another couple of hundred for some neighbors who have some critters.
I do the mowin, teddering and raking, the wife drives the tractor and bales. I ride on the wagon behind the baler and build the load. Beat Les |
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Smoldering and burning for a week yes, some fires have actually lasted longer believe it or not. I never said ground based was not also involved Air force was definitely not involved, not sure where you got that one. They dropped mud and water both, from dedicated forestry service and private water bomber fixed wing and helicopters. Not sure if you are aware, but they can actually hit what they aim at, so no they did not bomb the entire town with anything. Any other questions? I probably have some pictures of the A-26's and electra's they used somewhere, we helped support them during the fight. |
Mulch/ wood chip pile fires are very common. I respond to numerous ones a year.
They can get hot enough from decomposition that they will self combust. Biggest problem is, the fire normally starts deep within the pile. As someone stated above if you don't break it apart you are effed. If you break it apart you are effed. It just gets bigger until enough water is placed. This is one we had back in May of this year. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1627421967.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1627421999.jpg |
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At least it was just a little one |
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You make that sound like a really good time! You should have been paying them to have that kind of fun. |
Interesting that some of the more, uh, rational people on this board seem to have farming and thus an early appreciation for hard work and self-sufficiency in their past.
Just an observation. |
Hay making :( I had worked as a hay carter and shed stacker since I was about 13. Really hard work.
Then when I finished high school at 17 before I went to uni I worked the summer making hay. We worked every day for about 10 or 12 hours unless it rained - my luck, it didn't rain for three months. But it paid for my uni expenses. I think I've still got the abs from those days of hard work. |
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I will chime in later. I am currently walking to my baler / tractor to replace the cam in the pickup… 2nd time in a week.
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Thanks! |
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making hay
If you want it to rain, cut your hay field, never fails
The neighbor keeps mine cut https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...b2ea5e629b.jpg |
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One of my coolest scars is from a tobacco spike. I was cutting and the guy spiking dropped the stick (with the spike on it) and as it arced down it sliced right across my forearm. That was probably 40 years ago and I still have a a big scar. Probably because we kept working and I got tobacco juice in the cut all day long... ;) |
The farm I own is a former tobacco farm. I was able to convert two of the old tobacco barns into storage and a shop, including the old "stripping" room. We replaced another large tobacco barn in rough shape with a stable.
My wife grew up on a tobacco farm across the peninsula and we were NOT going to get involved with tobacco in any way shape or form. As MRM and others ave mentioned, tobacco farming, based on my wife's description since I never had the pleasure, is evidentially touch labor to 10th degree, nasty touch labor in the field, stripping it, hanging it and packing it for sale. It was very profitable in this area, however. |
One of my PCA friends worked in the large corporate HR department for many years and made good money. He retired, and bought a ranch that is 160 acres. He started raising longhorn cattle as a hobby and his goal was to have enough longhorns that his wife would quit naming them so he could take them to market and she not get emotional.
He goes to a lot of farm auctions, and early on saw a square hay baler that was almost free it was so cheap. He bought it and started making square bales on with his fields of grass. Then he realized why it was so cheap. It almost killed him throwing all those bales on the truck, and then up into the hay barn. He was happy to unload it at an farm auction and went to the round bails. With a wet year like this one he has a full hay barn, and sells the excess. Of all the "hobbies" in the world, farming is way down near the bottom the list for me. I know very little, (basically nothing) about livestock. He has 5 horses, and many dozens of longhorns now and just loves farm life. His wife keeps all the dogs dumped out there and they have a lot of dogs the (expletives) jerks of the world dump in the country. Only two dogs are inside dogs, the rest have a warm dry place in the barn. |
My grandfather had a tobacco base that he leased out. He acquired it back in the 1930s. He never grew tobacco that I know of, but he made some good money off of it over the years. Most of the farms that grew tobacco in Ohio were an acre or so in size.
Paul, was your farm a central processing facility or did one farm use all those barns? Ohio tobacco farmers co-operated drying barns because the individual farms were so small. Glen, I always wanted to get back to farming as a retirement hobby. I grew up on a farm and spent most of my life writing about farming and farm machinery, but never had time to do much of it. We now have 5 acres that I love putting to good use. We so far have not gotten into livestock, but we do want to grow some meat chickens. We've thought about raising a butcher hog and a steer, but the "becoming a pet" aspect of it would be hard for us. It would be tough to spend the better part of a year feeding and caring for the welfare of an animal and then killing it. |
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