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Re: What's next? Long


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Posted by Billy NY on January 02, 2013 at 14:10:43 from (72.226.79.200):

In Reply to: Re: What's next? Long posted by NY 986 on January 02, 2013 at 12:56:03:

The situation varies quite a bit, depending on so many different factors and combinations of things, where I live, given the environment not so far away, and today's climate with the criminal element, its best to keep people out, and at a distance as much as possible. Its hard to justify wasting time on dealing with it, but if I ignored most or if not all of it, which I have done at times, it would literally be overrun, nuisances beyond tolerance and so on.

At another location, we have a field that has another set of transmission lines, like here, 115,000 lines, own on both sides, it passes thru on a corner, atv'ers, sleds, took down fences where livestock was pastured. The fix was to repair the fence, and reroute the trail, they can pass, its not a nuisance, no reason to come into the place, nothing to worry about.

At home, its more of a preventative maintenance, too close and too easy for someone to come right out of the thicket, woods, right to my back door without being seen, the less knowledge they have or could gain about the lay of the land nearby, the better.

A lot of people from around here head to tug hill, with sleds, bar hopping, they do the same locally, hard to say how safe that is if a person ties one on. There's one local guy here, comes through on a sled, with a no restriction pipe or open header and its unbelievably loud at 2AM, compared to a stock sled, he gets to the bottom field and just lays in on it all the way across 7 acres or so, wakes up the neighborhood. Or, you get a whole convoy of them, so nice when you have to get up for work in a few hours and get woke up at all hours of the night. I do remember before all these were around, all the fields were fenced in locust post and barbed wire, only thing that made tracks in the dirt was tractors.


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