[AT] Pitchforks - new vs. old.
George Willer
gwill at toast.net
Fri Mar 25 07:33:00 PST 2005
> That is one of those simple things that you normally don't give a lot of
> thought to but
> can make a huge difference in use. If the stall is cleaned daily or even
> weekly the new
> fork would work fine but for packed stuff you might want to watch for a
> good old fork
> with tapered tines. I have not had a chance to look at farm stores to see
> if any of the
> new forks come with tapered tines.
> Now you have the "straight poop"... ;-)
>
> --
> "farmer", Esquire
My favorite fork is a king sized version of the normal manure fork... I use
it a lot for various landscaping jobs. I don't know its' original purpose,
but assumed it may be a fodder fork. It had 5 or maybe 6 tapered tines that
are maybe half again as long as a regular fork. I remember getting it at an
auction where it was selling along with a cheap level as a twofer. The
winning bidder was complaining about having to take the fork he didn't want
to get the level. I asked him to name a price for the fork and he said $5.
I couldn't get it out fast enough. My newer manure fork doesn't get used at
all. I'll have to check whether it has straight tines.
O K, I checked. The wonderful fork has 5 20" tapered tines. The newer
Union fork has 4 13" straight tines. Funny, I never noticed that they were
straight, only that I didn't like it.
George Willer
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