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Father has been cleaning up some brush piles. Beautiful day and nice clean piles so there shouldn’t be much left overs.
Brother and I have been getting the corrals ready to load out yearlings next week. The prices were only off about a dime from last year which is a lot better than I was expecting. Hopefully we can make it up next year..........
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Originally posted by rumrocks View PostWoodland,
Don't know much about fire and poplars, but in the summer when a fire roars through, do the poplars survive or do they die.
They are a persistent nemesis of mine.
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https://www.agriville.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=7391&d=1610088201
Mallee, why not a longer auger and just move it between bins instead of messing around with those 2 extra augers at the top of the bins?
Do you own your own truck? Seems every picture in Australia shows custom haulers, mother bins and grain carts, but no farmer owned trucks. Is it taxes or government regulations that discourage truck ownership?
Assuming you don’t own a truck, how do you get fertilizer and seed out to your drill?
Lots of tip up boxes on Austrian trucks. They have almost disappeared here in Canada from the grain hauling scene. Perhaps a lot to do with Bourgault figuring out how to use hopper trailers to fill airtanks?
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Originally posted by woodland View PostI’m pretty sure the poplars around here would survive a nuclear holocaust. We’re normally quite wet so runaway fires aren’t much of a concern or common. You can shave them off at ground level and they’ll sucker back thicker than quackgrass in a manure pile. Only yellow iron, a complete douse of tordon, or constant abuse from cows seem put a lid on them.
They are a persistent nemesis of mine.
fire also
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