Tuesday morning started off with a neighbor calling to ask for a tug out of the mud. Good grief he's in there !!
We were determined to combine soybeans so we got the combine fueled up and ready to go.
I put the big ******** the combine. If it wasn't there we'd need it, that's how it works. I'd imagine this combine with duals and 4wd will go through more mud than the other one but that just means it'll be in that much farther if it does get stuck !!
This is one of my favorite bearings on the farm to grease. You can't reach it from the ground so we grease it on top the bin.
Annnnnd we're off !! Of course Dad has to make the first few passes with the new combine to make sure "it all works good and whatnot" Ya okay
First few passes getting unloaded. We checked moisture and the combine is almost spot on with it's real time sensors. The beans are in that 11.1-11.9% moisture range. Perfect !!
Good grief you know it's wet when there are mushrooms growing in the field
Once Dad was rolling along I went home to play with the dozer. This thing has earned the name "Anne" after Anne Robinson (host of the show "The Weakest Link") It seems just as I get one thing fixed another blows apart and causes issues.
And here is Anne sitting after she tried to start herself on fire. A piece of the return line worked free and shot raw fuel at the turbo. Didn't take long to cause a smoke show. Luckily I had the fire extinguisher on board and nothing really happened other than I made a nasty dusty mess on the engine. I replaced all the return lines between the injectors and off I went !!
My Mom send me this picture last night. She said I must have been listening to something pretty good as I was dancing away up there. Lol. It was Thunderstruck by AC/DC so yeah. Pretty good indeed !!
Dad finished with one field and moved onto another. This one was a little wetter but still okay. 12.5% or so.
They are almost waist high in this field !!
I was in a hurry unloading the loads from the first field so here is load #4 going in the bin.
Mmmmmm. Nothing like the dust off a load of beans to make you smile
Wednesday morning I had some repairs to do on the gravity box that rolled over a few years back.
Both front and rear support beams had large cracks in them. I welded them up after it rolled over but they're getting pretty bad.
Smoke em' if ya got em' !!! A guy I work with said Super Lube is a great cutting tool aid so I thought I'd give it a shot. Well it works good but makes a stinky mess so back to using used engine oil it is for us.
We decided to go all out and plate the entire area. Hopefully this will hold !!
I need to get some nice Brent red but for the time being I primed them grey and moved on. And I didn't take a picture of that so maybe I did, maybe I didn't. You'll never know .....
Random picture that doesn't really fit in anywhere so here it is. Those damn spill proof cans cause more hassle and spills than they prevent so I found a nice easy solution. Take the whole nozzle off. If anyone knows of a conventional nozzle conversion kit I'd be all over a couple of them !!
Time to bale soybean straw !!
Oh yeah, the new combine goes through more mud. The other one would have not made it out of there !!
It never fails. The baler drops a bale in a mud hole.
Crazy dry bales make for amazing bedding !!!
This one was about to come out so before hitting the road I kicked it out the rest of the way. Be a shame to have it fall out on the road in front of someone and have my bale get all beat up by a vehicle running into it
I baled 70ish bales before I had an issue. Not bad. A knotter gott all gummed up for some reason. Cleaned it out and restrung the twine top and bottom and it was good to go. <- if you've ever done that you know it's a fair bit of dusty mess on a square baler. Not bad, but not a ton of fun either !!
Back up and running again !! Just flying along at 6.2mph
111 bales total. Not bad for a few hours of baling.
Last load of 36 to unload. The front 18 are a "tad" wet but it's raining as I'm typing this so I'm glad I baled them up !!
