I didn’t drop off the face of the earth and I’m not bed ridden, I have proof. Last Saturday, my daughter and I brought this gem home. It’s a ’73 that belonged to my Uncle PL that recently passed away. His family lives out in Wyoming and nobody else wanted it. No keys and no title. Wheels locked at an angle. 5 hours to load and ended up putting it on the trailer backwards.
Trying to finish the Muguguy Pine area. The berm was blocking the view of the pine, difficult to mow, and the near corner, was rutted where someone decided to go wheeling. Hooked up the plow to the Old Mule and started tearing it up. I didn’t get a picture of what it looked like before I started unfortunately. I plan to hit the area with the rototiller today and HOPEFULLY seed it tomorrow. I’ve also included a pic of my dreaded foe, my arch enemy, THE IVY. I left the plow down by the Muguguy Pine back in the spring because I knew I was coming back to finish the job. In the meantime THE IVY had grown up to the bottom 3pt links on the plow. I had my rubber boots and gloves on when I hooked up to the plow, but I still got THE IVY on me somehow.
And just so you don’t think I’m neglecting the barn, I started working on cleaning the siding I got from the fallen horse barn. For all those who are upset that I’ve destroyed the patina, I had no choice. When I took it down some of it had mold on it and the fact that it had to sit outside and got wet caused even more mold, so time to clean it. Don’t tell my mom, she’ll want to strangle me. After two days, I’ve got about 2/3 done and I hope to finish today. I plan on using this wood in the barn as wainscoting. This brings me to a couple of questions. While cleaning I saw a bunch of tiny holes, about a 1/16th of an inch in diameter. Carpenter ants? And I found a ********* ant, about ½” long, bulldozing the wood around. How do I get rid of them cheaply? And the next question, when I’m done, what kind of finish should I put on the wood. I’m not terribly concerned about making it fire retardant, more about what will be cheap and durable.