[AT] Potato diggers - Slight variation
Indiana Robinson
robinson at svs.net
Sun Jan 1 08:45:20 PST 2006
On 1 Jan 2006 at 3:46, Greg Hass wrote:
> First of all, Happy New Year to everyone. Grant's post reminded me of
> something that has been on my mind quite a bit recently. I have some
> problems quite similar to his, one being limited funds
and the other
> farming only a little over a hundred acres. I have no
idea how many on
> this list farm at all, particularly how many farm small
acreages. As I
> have mentioned in previous posts, all of the machinery I
own except for the
> corn planter and skid steer is 30+ years old.
>
> I am generally on the lookout for various machines, but
the problem
> is: where I can I find them? I used to be able to find
some at auctions,
> however the auctions that have the equipment I need have
pretty much run
> their course and auctions now are mostly large farm
auctions. Our local
> machinery dealers have refused for quite a while to take
any of this small
> type of equipment on trade. It is now rumored that our
local John Deere
> dealer (whom I do not patronize and who bought the
dealership from the
> previous owner 2 years ago) will not take any equipment
over 5 years old on
> trade. Three miles from me is a local machinery jockey
in his mid-30s who
> handles just the type of equipment I need. However, he
is so crooked that
> not even a flame wrench can straighten him out, which is
sad because our
> area could really use this type of dealer.
>
> My only alternative seems to be fence row hunting, which
is difficult
> because many of the fence rows are not visible from the
road. For
> instance, my field cultivator and crop sprayer I got from
a cousin who had
> them sitting in tall weeds out behind the barn for 15+
years. Both
> required several hundred dollars in repairs to get them
in working order
> but at least now I have fairly decent, usable machines.
My roll-over plow
> I heard about by accident. A guy a couple of miles away
had purchased it
> on a deal with a used tractor and never used it. It had
been sitting there
> for over 10 years. The problem with this type of
acquisition is that in
> all of these cases I had been looking for the equipment
for 3 or more years
> before I found it. Should I need a machine in the near
future they are
> almost impossible to find quickly.
>
> At the present time I am looking for a flail chopper.
For those not
> familiar, they were a machine 5-ft. wide that cut hay
with swinging flails,
> threw it into an auger, which in turn augered it into a
set of knives which
> recut the hay then blew it into a wagon to feed the
cattle on a daily
> basis. I do not have livestock, but on my limited
acreage such a machine
> would do a good job of cutting up the cornstalks so they
wouldn't pug my
> plow. Twenty years ago there were hundreds of them in
our area so the
> problem now is to find one. I have never heard of an
online service with
> listings of this type of equipment, although it would
probably be handy. I
> know here's no magical anser to the problem. I guess I
just needed to vent
> a little going into the new year.
>
> Greg Hass
Hi Greg:
Son Scott bought a regular Brady stalk chopper (I think it
was called a 4 row) at auction a year or so ago and started
to fix it up but we are switching to all hay and horse
pasture. Right now I don't plan to plant any corn this
year. I think it is missing one half of the PTO shaft and
it needs a smallish (famous last words) repair to one end
of one shaft where a drive pully mounts on it (pulley loose
on shaft). The chopper probably had paint on it at one
time... ;-)
Scott just walked in and I asked him if he wanted to sell
it and how much. He shrugged and said $50.
It is this type but not as wide and has less paint (copy
and paste):
http://www.agdealer.com/pages/view-
listing.cfm?ID=238364&ClientID=124
He is also selling a Ford 4-16" semi-mounted plow but he
has more in it. Wants $250. He is getting rid of some of
the stuff he bought a few years ago and generally looks to
just get his money back. We were thinking of renting some
more ground together and were setting up to cover ground
fast with two sets of equipment but his job has rapidly
grown to the point that he has trouble coming up with
enough time for such things now. I am not interested in
more ground if he can't do it with me. His job pays a "lot"
more than farming... ;-)
I need to thin some stuff too but I haven't decided just
what yet.
--
"farmer"
Francis Robinson
Central Indiana, USA
robinson at svs.net
I have created a local Shopsmith users list for my area.
It is described as follows:
This is to be a list for Shopsmith owners and want to be
owners in the general area of Indiana. If you are across
the line in OH or IL that is fine too. I don't want to draw
a hard line but I hope for all members to be within a
reasonable driving distance of each other. This list is for
sharing woodworking tips and stories and Shopsmith tips and
stories but also is to be used for the buying, selling and
swapping of Shopsmith tools, accessories and parts between
members of this list.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/IndianaSSlist/
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