[AT] Test: trying to solve my problem

joehardy at epix.net joehardy at epix.net
Mon Dec 30 17:50:33 PST 2019


 Farmer, Read your message tonight and find somewhat similar here in NE PA. Poor hay year because to much rain & poor growing weather. Got our 268 baler stuck in mud. Brother in law didn't wait for me to help resulting in broken axle assembly.. Took our JD 320 track loader to get it on solid ground. Tough getting hay to dry for Winter storage. Then later I had an index finger right hand joint swell & red. into hospital for 7 days. Then out with picc line in left arm for antibiotics. Could only lift 2.5 lbs. Boy, dealing with the medical field was more frustrating than making good hay this year. looking now at erecting a pool barn to get all my toys out from under tarps and a dry place to work. Sorry for rambling..Joe Hardisky, Ryman Farm Dallas, PA.
    On Monday, December 30, 2019, 08:12:46 PM EST, Indiana Robinson <robinson46176 at gmail.com> wrote:  
 
 Hi Greg:
Year from hell is about right for the weather here in Central Indiana too. At least we have only had a tiny amount of snow so far. There were thousands of acres unplanted here and south of here. Then it stayed really hot and dry most of the summer. Pastures did poorly early and in mid summer both. Hay is running quite short around here and quality is poor. About "everything" was difficult this year.Diana and I have both been ill since the weekend after Thanksgiving with what the medical folks said is bronchitis caused by a viral infection. It is very prevalent around here and they say it has been really hard to get rid of it. We keep thinking we are going to get over it and then it comes back. I "think" that I have a handle on mine now but I'm not sure about Diana yet.Everyday stuff like horse fence work and wood cutting and splitting has been tough along with any brain work.  :-)    I got a major reprieve on part of that this past week. Our youngest daughter came home for Christmas from Vermont along with her daughter and son-in-law. She announced that she was giving us 8 ricks of seasoned and split firewood from a local vendor as a Christmas present. Also last week our son dropped 2 tri-axle loads of big wood he acquired from a tree trimmer that we can cut and split. Lots of stuff in it is short logs about 5' to 6' or so long and about 12" to 28" in diameter. Most of it is pretty straight stuff unlike a lot of tree trimmer wood. Then later he dropped off a shiny new 25 ton wood splitter that he said he decided that the farm just needed. It is a trailer type that will pivot to vertical or horizontal as wanted. I've always split all of my firewood by hand with mauls and wedges (since 1965).
We have good kids... I understand that there had been some behind the scene discussions about these things
*****BTW, Happy Birthday Spencer...

.

On Mon, Dec 30, 2019 at 12:27 PM Greg Hass <ghass at m3isp.com> wrote:

Although I have not solved my problem, I did get Ralph's reply and his 
weather report. Our weather here in Michigan's thumb is different.  We 
have had the year from He$$.  Spring was late and cold and wet. We 
started planting when we should have been done planting.  Then it quit 
raining and we had only about an inch for the whole summer and that came 
in about 5 small rains of only a tenth or two. Then we went from summer 
straight to winter with over a foot of snow the first part of November 
just as corn harvest started along with temperatures of as low  as 7 
degrees F.  We broke all kinds of records the first half of November.  
Harvesting losses on corn were quite high as I had to keep the header 
above the snow.  One time I guess I wasn't high as the sieves in the 
combine plugged with snow and I lost about 75 bushels before I caught 
it. Also with all the snow and mud, and there were many like me, each 
bin load in the combine had to be taken to the road and unloaded there, 
further slowing things down. The seasons have reversed because as I 
write this after 11 P.M. it is 40 degrees out and raining with around 2 
inches expected. The weatherman on the TV station for our area said in 
the next 2 days mother nature is going to throw us everything but the 
kitchen sink; rain, snow, sleet,cold and high winds. Our normal temps 
for this date are 30 daytime and 15 night time.
                    Greg Hass
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-- 
-- 

Francis Robinson
aka "farmer"
Central Indiana USA
robinson46176 at gmail.com








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