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What do you do on your farm?
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<blockquote data-quote="DrWazzock" data-source="post: 5866336" data-attributes="member: 2119"><p>4 days making a new door for the cattle shed, 1 day drilling some wheat which included a couple of hours fitting new bearings to the power Harrow roller. To be honest I find making the door more interesting than drilling the wheat, so I suppose that makes me a DIY enthusiast.</p><p></p><p>The good thing about farming is that a lot of it isn't farming. Whereas when I was worked in a engineering design office you had your nose to grindstone all the time and it got quite tiresome and tedious. I have sympathy for folk who do real jobs. I did one for about 15 years then I returned to farming, half of which is messing about, but I like it on the whole. My neighbour always starts the week with shooting all day Monday. That's the way. I'm not that decadent but I like his style.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DrWazzock, post: 5866336, member: 2119"] 4 days making a new door for the cattle shed, 1 day drilling some wheat which included a couple of hours fitting new bearings to the power Harrow roller. To be honest I find making the door more interesting than drilling the wheat, so I suppose that makes me a DIY enthusiast. The good thing about farming is that a lot of it isn't farming. Whereas when I was worked in a engineering design office you had your nose to grindstone all the time and it got quite tiresome and tedious. I have sympathy for folk who do real jobs. I did one for about 15 years then I returned to farming, half of which is messing about, but I like it on the whole. My neighbour always starts the week with shooting all day Monday. That's the way. I'm not that decadent but I like his style. [/QUOTE]
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