Today at work

Pan mixer

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Near Colchester
Yes, Financially satisfying,
I do wonder when dismantling, that when installed they never had Forklift, Telehandler, etc, just ladders and rope.
I have put them up (and taken some down) with ladders and a block and tackle, it was hard work but much better when we had a ratchet on a socket. Much easier with a loader. Block and tackle were fine in a decent barn when there was something above to hang them on. Makes me shudder to think of doing that nowadays.
 

Muddyroads

Member
NFFN Member
Location
Exeter, Devon
I have put them up (and taken some down) with ladders and a block and tackle, it was hard work but much better when we had a ratchet on a socket. Much easier with a loader. Block and tackle were fine in a decent barn when there was something above to hang them on. Makes me shudder to think of doing that nowadays.
As a teenager I helped to put a new bell frame into the church tower. Cutting into blocks of stone that we calculated to be way over 2 tonnes each, 80’ above the ground, built around 1000 years ago, it was an incredible experience and has stayed with me to this day.
 

Pan mixer

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Near Colchester
As a teenager I helped to put a new bell frame into the church tower. Cutting into blocks of stone that we calculated to be way over 2 tonnes each, 80’ above the ground, built around 1000 years ago, it was an incredible experience and has stayed with me to this day.
One of my old building built in the 1950s -30 foot trusses on up to 18 feet high uprights was all put up with shear legs and ropes, that wouldn't have been too exciting.
 

Farmer Roy

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
NSW, Newstralya
Mungs

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61FA8EE9-EEDD-49F3-AAF6-1282727C3D70.jpeg
 

Farmer Roy

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
NSW, Newstralya
I was working on a farm in the very thick of this, in 1984
Watch the video included in the below link. Old mate with the flame thrower was the next door neighbour, managing a corporate property, & I know / knew all the people featured.
We were sowing barley ( early cereal here ) at the time. With a 48 ‘ airseeder on 9 “ spacings. Every morning, you had to clear every seed boot & air hose, as they were all full of mice, climbing into the hoses looking for grain. You might end up with a few dead mice jammed upfront in the hose, then a heap of live mice stuck behind them, in a 1” hose that could be over 2 m long . . . We had a long piece of half inch steel rod that we used like a cleaning rod to push through the hoses & clear out the dead / stuck mice. Or you swing the hose around your head as fast as you could & hope centrifugal force did it’s thing. There are a lot of hoses on a 48’ Gyral airseeder . . . I was only 18 but I was the one driving the tractor & doing the planting, so it was me who was doing this every morning. Never forgotten it . . .
Didn’t matter if we left the machine out of the ground or buried as deep as it would go, mice would still get up into the seed boots & hoses. All we could do was fold it up so the wings were up in the air, but they still got into the centre section.
From memory, we stopped sowing as we realised the mice were digging the seed out of the ground . . .
Just after the barley sowing ( before wheat, our major crop then ), the farm took delivery of a brand new Versatile 946 4wd artic tractor. It was literally driven off the back of a truck & parked up. The mice got into it & destroyed the cab, eating all the soundproofing & dust proofing in the cab & electrical wiring, dyeing in the A/C in the roof, pîssing & shîtting all through it . . .
It was disgusting
Hate the smell of mice

www.abc.net.au

Disturbing 'felt highway' footage a worry amid warnings mice plague may worsen
A video from the 1980s has resurfaced, making those living through the eastern states' current mouse plague count their blessings.
www.abc.net.au
www.abc.net.au
 

Flat 10

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Fen Edge
Ok, we have mice issues in the sorghum.
Am going to put the plane over it, baits ( treated wheat ) at 1 kg / ha.
About $8 / ha for the bait & $8 / ha for the plane.
You can even smell the mice in the crop
No one waits for beneficial build up then?! Have all the birds of prey and mammalian predators been shot or something?
 

SFI - What % were you taking out of production?

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