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cliftonbros89
Well-known member
It’s getting pretty crazy with any place these daysHere I thought JD sold stuff on parts availability...same with CAT![]()
It’s getting pretty crazy with any place these daysHere I thought JD sold stuff on parts availability...same with CAT![]()
Wheat isn’t nearly as dirty as corn and beans are.Summer of '92 I helped my grandfather combine his 40-acre wheat field there in southern MO. The dust was terrible.
We put it in a cart and he hauled it to the elevator using his John Deere 60 tractor. Came back with around $9000 cash in his pocket, which was a lot for a young boy to see.
It was a combine just like this one.
Anyways, enjoy reading about your trials and tribulations. Here's to a good harvest.




Those Union Pacific guys in Illinois really like blocking the roads a lot.


It’s exactly right. I don’t want it to not rain. Honestly we could use a couple good gentle rains. Things are starting to get dry. The pastures were looking good a few weeks ago. But they’re even starting to turn a little bit.That's wheat harvest weather for you. It won't rain for weeks beforehand but as soon as the combines start rolling you'll be dodging showers every day.
How is the wheat running? Soft red?

Wow! That’s quite a bit of damage. That’s not good. Especially, getting into summer like this.I asked, just waiting for a reply.
Update: 150 Acres were lost, total devestation, waiting for agronomist recommendations about replanting.





But we got a pretty good chunk knocked out today.



You bet! Except he did put those two lock nuts on that spring yesterday so I could unload the grain cart that he’d been sitting and staring at for a good half hour.I bet your uncle just watches while you do the repairs? It’s just break time for him.
We must be the lucky ones! It’s constantly like that. Like you said. Gotta be in control. Also, he always knows the right way to do everything. But then just stands there and complains about everything.I've said it before and I'll say it again....I'm pretty sure your uncle is my uncle. Always has to be in control, even though he's really not, and has no problem sitting on his **** waiting for you to show up to do the job he should be doing.
You pretty much nailed it! There may be a chance we’re related. Or at least our uncles may be.Ah, he’s a Subject Matter Expert (SME). Those types are “always” called in to give “expert”
Advice on anything. And then Say afterwards if it didn’t work- “I didn’t think it would work like that”












After I gathered all of the bales up I hooked the 4020 to the other trailer to make the process a little faster. I saved him 2 trips, which was actually 3 trips for me. But regardless. He hauled while I hauled. So it saved him time.We were considering seeing if we could sell at least half of it. I know certain places there’s a good market for the large square bales of straw. I don’t know if it would matter that these are round or not.Sell the excess straw east. Not much straw that way. Or contact your local DOT office and let them know you have straw for sale. Lots of highway construction projects needing it for seeding cover.
The highway guys like rounds because they sit in their shredder/spreaders and chew them up.We were considering seeing if we could sell at least half of it. I know certain places there’s a good market for the large square bales of straw. I don’t know if it would matter that these are round or not.
Oh yeah. Big winter snow melts out west. Big rains up north of us. Some one decided to let water go from a reservoir somewhere. We see it. Makes a big difference.Good luck on the flooding. It's weird being adjacent to a big enough river that water upstream can end your week lol!
Thanks!Love the farm stories, Glad things are working out for y'all. Be SAFE!!!
Yeah that's crazy to think of.Oh yeah. Big winter snow melts out west. Big rains up north of us. Some one decided to let water go from a reservoir somewhere. We see it. Makes a big difference.
I’m just happy we’re not further south. We have the Missouri River and the northern Mississippi to deal with. Down south the get that plus the Ohio added into the mix.
Thanks, Dennis! The things I learn around here. I had to Google that.When planting beans that late June, do you plant determinate or indeterminate?
I suppose you’d say indeterminate, but that’s essentially everything we plant. Like this year we had anything from a 3-8 to a 4-6. But since we typically book majority of our seed months in advance, we got what we got. Planting beans in late June isn’t uncommon around here by any means. So it’s not really something we worry about.When planting beans that late June, do you plant determinate or indeterminate?
All that water has to go somewhere. If it runs down hill it goes to a creek or stream that runs to something bigger. That goes into a river, possibly into another river, into the Mississippi and into the gulf.Yeah that's crazy to think of.





















