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Saw your photo Hugh

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Paul Shuler

12-05-2006 15:01:45




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Saw your picture of the 130 in the tractor photos. Thanks for sharing Hugh. I plowed for about 3 hours on Saturday doing the driveway and the 1/4 mile lane. about 8" of snow with 1/2" of ice under it. Saw the wife out with the camera so I thought I would have some good shots of the super C to share with you all. turned out she was taking photos of the dogs and my boy playing in the snow. Not a single shot of the tractor. I don't know what's wrong with her. Stay warm Hugh.

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farmallhal

12-06-2006 07:55:44




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Paul Shuler, 12-05-2006 15:01:45  
Hey Hugh, Nice to see your post and the thread with Paul. Two really nice folks in Farmall Land. Yes, I received your note and just haven't gotten around to answering it. I was hoping you were going to get down this way last fall as we really had a nice one. I've been building fence all fall as I needed to get cows back in some good winter pasture and containment fences were non-exsistant. Probably spent at least 3 weeks clearing out fence row brush just to get to the old fence to get it out. Then had a dozer guy come in and he made quick work of all the remaining growth. Now I have over a mile of new fence. Still more to go but at least a good start. I'll get to your note and shout back. Have a good one and nice to hear from you. Hal

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Hugh MacKay

12-06-2006 10:09:58




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to farmallhal, 12-06-2006 07:55:44  
Hal: My gosh I feel for you taking old fence out of what is probably Carolinnian Forest and the thorns that go with it. That pains me just to think about you doing that task. We have those same species here. Coming from Nova Scotia and the Boreal Forest with it's spruce, fir, hemlock and pine, we were not familiar with those thorns.

Last summer I helped an old guy near here take down some fence in amoung thorns. I started off by tearing my arm on some rusty old fence wire. Nothing doing the old guy rushed me off to his first aid room on his gator. Cleaned it up, put some antiseptic on, he found a gauze pad, but noting to hold it in place. Then it hit him, duct tape, round and round my arm over the gauze, he went with duct tape. Back to work we went, got tangled up in those thorns. After about an hour the two of us had dozens of prick marks with streams of blood coming from our arms all the way up to our tee shirt sleeves. Then a neighbor dropped in, looked at the both of us and said,"who won the fight, you two look like you were shot at with bird shot". He looked at my duct tape bandage, said, "that is the only place you don't have blood running." I suggested, "maybe we should have wraped our entire arms in duct tape, before we started".

I wasn't really too awfully concerned, not hearing from you, although the thought had crossed my mind that you may not have received my e mail. I kind of figured you were probably busy. Little did I know you'd be spending your YT time patching up your wounds every night. You take care.Hugh

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farmallhal

12-06-2006 12:30:29




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Hugh MacKay, 12-06-2006 10:09:58  
Yep there were plenty of thorns. We have something down this way you might not have seen before. It is called Osage Orange or Hedge Apple in these parts. I saw them in Kansas where they were the fence. Those section roads usually had them planted on both side for a fence. Thorny enough to keep most cows home. I saw them around the Wichita area when I was at the Boeing plant there. Plenty of them as well as locust which really have long thorns. But I think the worst was those wild roses which grew up 15 feet tall or higher. Also, another real pain was all the grapevine some of which were at least 4" in diameter. Tarzen must have trained in these parts swinging on grapevines. Anyway, looks like a golf course now except for the pushed up piles of brush waiting to be burned. I sent you an email as well. Have a good one. Hal

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Al L. in Wisc.

12-06-2006 03:48:02




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Paul Shuler, 12-05-2006 15:01:45  
Funny postings. Great way to start the morning-coffee, women not taking tractor pictures-think it is estrogen. Then Hugh being a bleeding heart/tree hugger saying we shouldn"t waste energy on keeping the old codgers(s) warm/cold. Hugh, my 77 yr. old dad wouldn"t think it is a waste. O.T. must be 83 degrees in that nursing home though - {author wipes sweat from brow}. Enjoy your day!



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Hugh MacKay

12-05-2006 16:02:24




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Paul Shuler, 12-05-2006 15:01:45  
Paul: That was last years snow behind the 130. We haven't had any YET this year. I was at the eye clinic in London today and learned, just 40 miles north of here there is a foot of snow. I've been also hearing rumblings it's not far south of Lake Erie either. We are living in a truly blessed land.

I truly hope I don't have to get the 130 out all winter. If we could have it stay just as it is until end of March, then warm up, my feelings would not be hurt. I suspect I'm getting a bit carried away. It's not the 48 year old tractor being unwilling, but rather 64.5 year old flesh.

Man I'm getting to hate winter. When Canada and the US negociated that free trade agreement, they should have included a clause saying no senior is allowed to use heating oil or air conditioning. We would be forced to migrate with the birds. Just a damn waste of energy, keepin old folks warm and cool.

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Paul Shuler

12-05-2006 16:27:32




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Hugh MacKay, 12-05-2006 16:02:24  
How in the world did MO get snow before Canada? Something is not right. About an hour north of me up where Old lives buildings and boat docks are falling in due to the weight of the snow and ice. I guess now would be a bad time for you and your wife to drop in for that barbeque we talked about.



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Hugh MacKay

12-05-2006 16:58:38




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Paul Shuler, 12-05-2006 16:27:32  
Paul: Marg and I actually had a barbeque, over the weekend. The freezing temps did move in on Sun. night and has been hanging a few degrees below ever since, but no precipitation.

I see Hal Russel lurking around here tonight, haven't heard tell of him in awhile. I sent him a real long winded e mail about two months ago. I guess he decided not to respond as he probably couldn't take anymore of those for awhile. I suppose there is a possibility he didn't receive it, and is down there in MO, thinking I owe him one. If that is the case he's both lucky and right. I had some computer problems for awhile, this machine said sent, when in fact it didn't.

Surprisingly, right along the north shore of Lake Erie, they get very little snow. I am on the northern border of that. Problem here is it never goes above freezing, thus melting never sets the snow, so it blows around for days. I can see close to 4 miles west and about 3 to the east, no trees and no hills, man can that wind get up speed coming across Lake Huron out of MI. 2" of snow all piles up in everyone's yard. Seriously, the day I plowed that snow behind my 130, 200' away you could see the soybean stubble.

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farmallhal

12-06-2006 07:58:59




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 Re: Saw your photo Hugh in reply to Hugh MacKay, 12-05-2006 16:58:38  
Hugh, See my post above which was for you but was posted to Paul. Hal



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