[AT] Pioneer Village. Minden, Ne
Larry D Goss
rlgoss at evansville.net
Wed Nov 29 07:15:43 PST 2006
Whoa! Whoa! You mean to tell me that you emptied the rooms on the first
floor before emptying the attic? That could be downright dangerous.
There's a big article in this morning's paper about mine subsidence over in
Warrick county. If you're not careful, you could have a "working model" of
it right there at Robinson Manor.
If the New Madrid fault lets go, I'll be sure to send you an email so you
can take precautionary measures before the shock gets to Shelbyville. :-)
So tell us, how are you going to get rid of the effluent from the horses?
Are you going to spread it raw? Or do you have a lagoon system in mind?
maybe bag it and sell it to your Yuppie neighbors? On the way home from
traveling to eastern Ohio last weekend, I noticed there were a whole lot
more farmers and feedlots using liquid spreaders than I expected. All of
them were apparently lowering the level of their lagoons while the weather
is still good.
On a serious note, do you (or anybody else) have the information on the size
of cloth needed for making the standard sizes of feed and flour sacks? I
have a friend (fellow collector) in North Carolina who is putting together a
portable grist mill on a trailer along with a hit n' miss engine for
demonstration and show. He wants cloth sacks for use with a steelyard scale
and will probably end up making them himself. I thought there were some
printed feed sacks squirreled away in the farm house at Fort Wayne, but
can't seem to find them. I haven't checked the Farmer's Almanac; it may
have the information. But Googling "feed sack size" turns up mostly antique
shops that specialize in these items. There is no way this guy is going to
use collectible feed sacks at $30 to $60 EACH for this project.
Larry
----- Original Message -----
From: "Francis Robinson" <robinson at svs.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 29, 2006 7:30 AM
Subject: RE: [AT] Pioneer Village. Minden, Ne
> -----Original Message-----
> LOL! BTDT several times, Gene. Pioneer Village is a treasure for lovers
> of
> old iron. Farmer just "thinks" he lives at TMCOTKU.
>
> Larry
>
>
>
> Hi Larry:
> Actually "Robinson Manor" ;-) is now about 10 tons lighter iron wise
> than it was this spring. It is also well over a ton lighter of misc.
> "stuff"
> including maybe about a ton of old magazines, catalogs, and phonebooks and
> about anything else my mother squirreled back (in the house) over the
> years.
> We haven't even gotten a good start on the attic rooms nor the basement
> rooms.
> I hope that before spring that the place will be another 10 tons lighter
> iron wise but I am waiting for the New Madrid Fault to adjust to the
> weight
> shift first. ;-)
> I also need to remove a couple of tons of "stuff" from the three barns,
> the
> tool shed and several small outbuildings.
> Most of the now missing iron was mostly removed by a young fellow that
> stopped buy and talked right about buying it and was willing to clean
> everything up as he went instead of just wanting to pick and choose the
> best
> stuff and leave the rest like some others that stopped by. I didn't get
> rich
> from it but I weighed what he paid (in advance) against my cutting it up
> (cutting cost + labor) and hauling cost and time. I also considered the
> possibility of personal injury (not only do I not like pain, it can be
> costly), possible damage to equipment, and the possible cost of a tangle
> with the DOT as well as the distinct possibility of cutting up one or more
> tires at the salvage dealer's lot.
> Letting someone else do all that work made sense to me. ;-) Besides,
> we
> are still involve in "the never ending move from hell" and catching up
> some
> other stuff. Having two mothers in nursing homes takes more time than one
> might think too. It's always something.
> Once I get rid of that second 10 tons I can go to some auctions and buy
> some more "stuff"... ;-) I am hoping to pick up a bred mare or two
> soon.
> That will be well over a ton...
>
>
>
> --
> "farmer"
>
> The brave may not live forever but the easily frightened may never live at
> all.
>
> Francis Robinson
> Central Indiana, USA
> robinson at svs.net
>
>
>
> --
> No virus found in this outgoing message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.5.430 / Virus Database: 268.14.19/555 - Release Date:
> 11/27/2006
> 6:09 PM
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> Remembering Our Friend Cecil Monson 11-4-2005
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
>
More information about the AT
mailing list