Scorpiongrass - Sit Spot #1553 - November 24, 2024
12 minutes ago
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Life on a family farm in the wilds of Upstate New York
6 comments:
Cool pictures. Wish I only had one wire to have to put back up in stead of 3 or 4 strands of barbed wire. What kind of thistles? Russian thistles, like the tumbleweeds? That is what happens around here. Someone plants something in some farm ground and it doesn't grow but the thistles do, then they break loose and get caught in a fence and pile up collecting snow and causing a mess. In spring we used to walk along with a pitch fork and throw them off the fence and burn them. Slow, dirty, messy job!
Looked like--and was--a great day to get out in the field.
Poor Liz and her maple allergy! Terry has a similar problem with white cedar (no other kinds--just white cedar). Working for the EPA, they used to take her to south Jersey to find the swamps in the spring. She'd get all sneezy in about two minutes if there was a white cedar swamp within a mile.
Beautiful views! Putting up a fence may not be the most fun thing to do but at least you get to do it in a beautiful setting.
What beautiful country.
And now this city girl is going to reveal her ignorance:
"danger from power take offs"
(what's a power take off :0) ?
Dang. And a "PTO"?
If the answers are too painfully obvious - please delete this comment and I'll just slink away :-D
JB, we put up barbed wire and electric both most places, but this is just a little temporary bit of fenced hayfield really. It is internal with other fields around most of it and doesn't need much.
I believe the thistles are Canada thistle.
http://www.ext.colostate.edu/Pubs/natres/03108.html
They don't blow around but they are nasty and get real tall, die and tip over on the wire.. I don't think we have the tumbling kind here and from the sounds of things I guess I don't envy them!
Joated, it is a misery for her, although she hasn't been as sick so far this year as usual. Sorry for poor Terry too!
SCMomma, it was so funny...I was commenting on your post on fence and came back and you had commented on my post on fence.
Cathy, here is a link to a pictorial explanation...http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://web.extension.illinois.edu/agsafety/images/pto_image006.jpg&imgrefurl=http://web.extension.illinois.edu/agsafety/equipment/ptosafety.html&usg=__D6qwCW2NONbE-w3lZUincJCAGbM=&h=393&w=611&sz=20&hl=en&start=20&sig2=9KhOSbGlop42cVtHnxl6Og&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=bz1q86R3RnPmyM:&tbnh=87&tbnw=136&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dpower%2Btake%2Boff%2Btractor%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26sa%3DN%26rlz%3D1R1GGGL_en___US345%26tbs%3Disch:1&ei=qou2S5iPNsSqlAfKzIBh
Thanks for clarifying the nature of PTO's.
Whoa! That half devoured scarecrow is very sobering.
And now I understand why one would prune any dangling apparel.
Thanks, TC.
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