woodfor1
Active member
Thank you for all the updates on your farm.I check in with you every morning and hope to see something new.Keep your family safe and we will all make it through this.


Are you going to build the shop first then your house?
You bring up a good point .... we didn't even get hats or jackets or a free meal or nothing yet !!! I'm gonna have to politely remind the sales guy that I can't joke about buying an $80k hat and getting a tile plow setup for free if I don't actually get the hat !!!As a grownup farm boy, no equipment has ever been bought that WASN"T on sale and a hat thrown in![]()
Nephew in central Illinois is out running disk 3" deep to scratch out weeds where they spread manure last fall.
Thank you for following along from afar !!Have quietly been following your adventures and sometimes smiled.
For now I say stay safe and don't fall off any roofs![]()
I'll try on the updates but I can not do the daily sort of funny stuff. I'm a pretty boring dude and that took some serious creativity juices flowing to get that last one come aliveJbl: yep keep those daily farm reports coming. Even with my poor imitation of Dan Akroyd my wife was laughing almost harder than I was.
Greater words might not have been spoken about our current situation so keep on keeping on and don’t forget to give us those daily reports.
Cheers!!

Tangents are always welcome here. You never know when you veer off into new unexplored territory and end up somewhere neat !!MAN-OH-MAN! Am I ever loving the barren (mostly) roadways, during what was once my hellish commute!It ***** that it took something like a virus scare fueled by a biased media which breathlessly perpetuates their agenda in our faces, and...oh wait, I'm going off on a tangent. Sorry!
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Anyway, the past couple weeks commuting to work have been amazing! It's like it's 1993 all over again on the roadways.Seriously, it's cut off 45 minutes of my morning & evening commute, I LOVE it!
Because of this whole "work from home" thing that many have had to do, I wonder if many of the companies who have had employees working from cubicles in large buildings will suddenly realize that they don't need those cubicles...in those large buildings (that cost many $), and that their workforce can simply work from home? Today's tech is great! A win-win, right?
Annnd the BEST win-win for me, is that all those employees will no longer have to commute, so there's that many fewer idiots clogging the roadways, slowing my stinkin' commute to my job that sadly can't be done from my computer room at home, where I'm typing this marvelous marvel, fueled by what is now 5 snorts of a certain fine Canadian whiskey.Now where was I...oh yeah, fewer idiots on the road, I like that idea!
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Thanks for following along !! We're as safe as can be out here. Still haven't heard of anyone we know that has actually gotten this thing .....Thanks for the update!
Stay safe!
Ok gee no pressure to keep it updated now is there lol. Things should pick up here soon as we get into the fields again. Thanks for following alongThank you for all the updates on your farm.I check in with you every morning and hope to see something new. Keep your family safe and we will all make it through this.![]()
The house would have been built and 10yrs old already if Mama Bear had here way and she's going to have to wait another year to (hopefully) be able to built that dream house of hers. We've got A LOT of stuff to get rid of in the spot where they house will be going. Getting dirtwork done this fall to build next year is the goal though.Mike, thanks for the update. I'm glad everyone there is ok and surviving the stay home order.Are you going to build the shop first then your house?
I appreciate seeing a slice of farm life.
My GF has participated in one of those virtual Zoom cocktail parties as well.
Take care
Jay
The combine is 93% back together. A local welding shop put some pretty serious metal on that broken axle and from the looks of it I think it'll last forever now !!Hows the combine fix?




















I try to not touch the keyboard after I've had a fewTangents are always welcome here. You never know when you veer off into new unexplored territory and end up somewhere neat !!
Seems like the 20% of "non-essential" workers are causing 95% of the traffic problems
in me, but I guess I couldn't help myself. Thanks for not getting mad at me.
The week prior, we tried to buy some chicks, and the IFA store was completely sold out. We had to be there the following Thursday by around 10:00am, or we might miss out again! By then, the store had put a "maximum of 10" cap on how many chicks people could buy. Just nuts! 
No worries. Like I said, tangents are welcome. I'm not some thread nazi that will get grumpy if someone deviates off the thread path. Actually, that is sort of the thread path. This summer once the shop starts getting built will put an end to a 5 year tease about a shop projectI try to not touch the keyboard after I've had a fewin me, but I guess I couldn't help myself. Thanks for not getting mad at me.
Yes, it does appear that the 20% really does seem to be the root cause of the crazy congestion around here. I wouldn't have guessed there would be such a difference!
BTW, after finally caving in to much begging from SWMBO, a couple weeks ago we brought home 5 little chicken babies. They are currently in a large Tupperware container in the living room. Gonna have to start building them a coop soon! I also need to figure out how to suspend the water & food trays a bit off the floor, they keep kicking wood chips in there!
Also, apparently this COVID scare has also created some "chicken hoarding" around my area.The week prior, we tried to buy some chicks, and the IFA store was completely sold out. We had to be there the following Thursday by around 10:00am, or we might miss out again! By then, the store had put a "maximum of 10" cap on how many chicks people could buy. Just nuts!
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Bah. It's just a Farmall M. You could drop a house on it and it'll still start right up !!!Well you either know what you're doing or you're braver than I...dismantling a shed with a tractor and things still inside. First thing I'd do would be drop something right on top of it.
If'fin you're in need of a few chicks I'm sure I could find a few for ya![]()
Not sure how long it'd take them to walk to Utah but it might work out lol.Yeah, I told my lady that if we can't find any chicks right now, I think I know a guy...![]()
As always, I'm looking (well, me & a bunch of us) forward to your continued updates out on Quaker Road.![]()

























No kidding. It was a 50/50 split on "should we go into the mud or not?" and I lost the coin toss so in we went ......wow what a mess. keep up the hard work.
I like the work as much as Dad disliked losing a boot. He yelled loud enough that we all looked to make sure he was okay and not having some sort of "actual" problem lol.JBL: WOW that's some serious WORK and MUD. i bet your dad didn't have many good words to say cause I bet it's still cold in your part of the world too.
keep up the updates and i'm still smiling and almost laughing at the "SOMEBODY SWALLOWED A BAT" line in your recent "FARM REPORT"
I would have thought you'd do all that work on the wet areas in the middle of summer, but you and your dad are so busy all year long I'm guessing this is the only time to do the work AND maybe the ground is wet there all year long. are you planting on top of the new drain too so you get more crop?
carry on !!
BTW: I'm running out of Corona for my daily 1 beer to keep my immune system in good shape.
Me too but I lost the coin toss again so away (or not really I guess) we went !!!I would've quit after chaining the first tractor up to help lol. Better wait for drier weather.

Lol. After the mud we dealt with last fall it didn't seem that bad actually. It was a mess and we should have quit a long time before we did but last fall made us a little more tolerable of mud. PLUS there was a nice dry high spot "only" a few hundred feet away we were tying to get to so we kept at it longer than we should have.Wow, yeah quite a day you guys had.










OK guys, I'm no longer have any ties to friends with farms anymore, so I haven't been able to add anything of substance to this group!
You guys just have it to easy installing your field tiles !!! LOL. Back in the 50's, as kids we would help a family friend hand dig the the trenches, and install clay tiles. Progress was slow, had a lot of fun working with the other kids. Mrs Blacks lemonade was wonderful as were her hand made sandwiches. I think we paid by how many tiles we installed that day..... Will never forget the experience !!!
Now I'm 73 and retired living on a mountaintop somewhere in TN. I've traded in my professional tools and truck for a little 443 Bobcat to do yard work! - Cheers !!!
AL
Reading it and following along is quietly adding substance to this thread. Thank you for doing that !!OK guys, I'm no longer have any ties to friends with farms anymore, so I haven't been able to add anything of substance to this group!
You guys just have it to easy installing your field tiles !!! LOL. Back in the 50's, as kids we would help a family friend hand dig the the trenches, and install clay tiles. Progress was slow, had a lot of fun working with the other kids. Mrs Blacks lemonade was wonderful as were her hand made sandwiches. I think we paid by how many tiles we installed that day..... Will never forget the experience !!!
Now I'm 73 and retired living on a mountaintop somewhere in TN. I've traded in my professional tools and truck for a little 443 Bobcat to do yard work! - Cheers !!!
AL

We keep on keeping on because that's what we know !!! Moving **** around is what we're good at lol. We buy commercial fertilizer to supplement what we can't get from the manure but manure saves us buckets of money each year. Plus it adds micro-nutrients and organic matter into the soil that you could never get from commercial fertilizer.JB: thanks for the update and sorry to hear the cold and snow just won't stop, but I know you and the family just keep on rolling. feeding and caring for animals, moving their **** to the fields so your dirt is probably better than you can buy and also tearing down stuff and building and making plans for the future.
I'm guessing you are leasing the machine that is digging the trenches and laying the pipe or did you say you bought it cause you have a lot of this work to do?
carry on and I think warm weather is coming your way cause it finally reached 60's for more than a few days here and we are actually seeing the sun again.
my little yard I hand mow, trim and torch weeds would make you laugh that it takes me so long to maintain it, but I never was really a YARD GUY.
cheers and yep had my corona with quesadillas and homemade guacamole last night and it was pretty tasty.
There are a few turning points in all our lives and I think I'm close to another one. The first was when I decided I wanted to peruse a career as a history/economics teacher. I went quite a ways through that program in college until a few things happened and I changed paths to going to a vocational school to hone my computer/networking skills. I held a job as a Network Administrator right out of college for a nationwide trucking company and hated it. Too much fancy cloths wearing keeping up with the Jones for my liking. I had a HIGHLY modded Grand Prix at the time and people thought it was silly and told me that the "typical" IT Guy ride was a Kia Soul. I knew then and there that I needed to get out !!!!! Lol. I worked at a junk yard for a while and ended up applying at Leedstone for nothing in particular and ended up landing what would turn out to be the best job in the company. I did that for a few years very successfully and the Service Team Manager kept poking and prodding at me to come over to the Service Team to do computer junk and I finally caved in. I thought it'd be easier and more flexible than what I was doing so I jumped in heads first. No looking back so far but that was a MAJOR change in my life. I think I'm headed for another major change but who knows until it actually happens .....I don't know if I will ever be able to retire at this point, but I'm glad you have made it.Looking back, there was two opportunities where I was given choices to take one road over another. I'm pretty sure I should have taken the other one in both instances.
Damn.



























Never. Ever. See a sunset without at least a little appreciation. So much stuff in this world is messed up but this is a constant. Just beautiful !!!
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Not a proud moment but a learning moment. Long story short ..... the tile bound up on the cart and stretched and pulled apart underground and we had to dig it up and fix it. We know what went wrong and didn't do it again all day so I guess we learned the first time !!!
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They look MUCH nicer to use than the silly orange ones with hole in them. Sadly, our county REALLY frowns on above surface inlets so we just space the tiles 10' apart in the REALLY low spots where water gathers to help them drain faster. Once that ground has dried out from the tile below the water holding capacity of that low spot is substantially higher so it actually works very well.you ever seen these for inlets?
https://www.agridrain.com/shop/c66/...diameter-18-tall--yellow-water-quality-inlet/
Up front cost of the tile is about $0.33/ft after tax for 4" tile plus fittings and everything that goes along with getting it in the ground. That doesn't sound like much but once you add the cost of the tile plow and other machinery and fuel we're in the $1.00/ft range pretty quick. It's still an AMAZING investment though !!!Tile runs 24/7/365. Seems hard to justify up front cost, but it pays for itself so many times over.
Most of our farm is pattern tiled and it makes so much difference that we take for granted. Used to spend most of our time fighting mud holes spring and fall only to get poor yields, now we rarely raise the cultivator.
Lol. Those Trelleborg's on there are kind of bald and are REALLY bad at cleaning themselves off. The Deere 8430 in front of the dozer has Firestone 23 Degree Radials and they come out of the mud almost clean with each revolution. It goes to show what tires work well in mud I guess !!I see why you guys are having so much trouble in the mud....you're running slicks on that tractor...![]()
Lol in this case if I had gotten out to "smell the roses" it would have smelled like steer manure but your point is well taken. We pass so many wonderful things by because we're in a hurry or grumpy about something that doesn't really matter. Be happy, smile more, stop and smell the roses and listen to the birds chirp. Nature has a way of bringing you back to reality !!...
So true! Don't forget to stay and smell the roses you see! There is to much gloom out there to not appreciate the small beautiful things in life. Thanks for sharing this moment!
That is the way to truly learn things, make the mistake, correct it and learn to avoid it.
Farmers always have big and fun toys :All this work now will make life easier in the future, that is a good investment.

There was water running in the tile minutes after it went in the ground. Water has a way of finding the easiest path and tile just helps that along. Once we're done messing around hooking up new lines and such the water that comes out of that tile will be cleaner than the water coming out of your faucet. I wouldn't hesitate for a minute to fill a glass and have a drink !!Great update!
I had no idea that the tile would work that well, that's really impressive! That's going to be so nice to not have to deal with mud bogs in your fields, once you're finished.





Mike, I assume the drainage systems will be wonderful until you have an extended dry spell. Farming is like a giant casino game. Put your money down and hope the dice go your way!
There was water running in the tile minutes after it went in the ground. Water has a way of finding the easiest path and tile just helps that along. Once we're done messing around hooking up new lines and such the water that comes out of that tile will be cleaner than the water coming out of your faucet. I wouldn't hesitate for a minute to fill a glass and have a drink !!

Mike, I assume the drainage systems will be wonderful until you have an extended dry spell. Farming is like a giant casino game. Put your money down and hope the dice go your way!