Posted by gitrib on August 25, 2011 at 11:52:25 from (99.75.34.181):
In Reply to: Re: O/T Shocking Corn posted by Pitalplace on August 25, 2011 at 07:50:14:
You got it right. Whe I was little I use to help my dad. His Corn binder had a bundle carrier and he would dump so many bundle in a pile. this way he could sort of dump the piles in a rows so he would not have to carry them to far to build the shock. He alway carried a little pail wirh a ball of binder twine and a had a lite weight rope with a pulley tied on one end. When the shock was as big as he wanted he would throw the pulley around the shock run the rope throgh the pulley and draw it up tight then put a strand of binder twine around the shock and tie it off. he never had any shocks blow apart. Ended up hauling it to the shredder Was blown on wire frame to use has calf shed in winter Raised some good calves on the stover See they were not so dumb.We are running around baling corn stock today. gitrib
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Today's Featured Article - What Oil Should I Use? - by Francis Robinson. I keep seein this question pop up over and over again in discussion groups all over the web. As with many things there are often several right answers and a few wrong ones. Some purist I'm sure will disagree to no end with what I will tell you but most of us out here in the real world don't really care do we ? Some of them only bring their noses down out of the air long enough to look down them anyway. If you are like me you are only doing this old tractor stuff because you enjoy it. You
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