Baymule’s Farm

baymule

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Today’s chore; clean up the weed mess that is my piles of wood posts and T-posts and important stuff. I’ve already dug the couple of half rolls of sheep and goat wire out of this mess and straighten up the rolls of wire. Due to 6 months of rain the first half of the year, I didn’t think too much about this. When I finally did, weeds were over my head and covered everything. I figured out pretty quick that I’d rather wait for a hard killing frost to tame the weed monsters.

So here we are. Sunny beautiful day.

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First I tried my Daddy’s yo-yo. I have a brand new one, but I like using his tools with the worn handles. But these weeds were too tall, thick and heavy.

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I got out 2 machetes and sharpened them.
What’s in here? A concrete block. That would really tear up a bush hog!

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Another one. There were more behind these two. The pile of used T-posts I salvaged out of the front fence line last fall are on concrete blocks right behind these blocks peeping out of the weeds.

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I stepped on the tall grasses and weeds, bent them down and whacked on them using both hands on the machete.

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Also in this tangled mess was some really heavy wire. It got scattered around when the fencing guys were here last December. That could do a number on a bush hog too.

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Look close

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What is that? It’s Carson! He had to go snuffle in the weeds, probably smelling rabbits. There is a Great Dane sized dog in there!

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I made it to the fence.

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Look at the rest of this mess!

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I stopped for a neighbors little boy to feed Spot his bottle. Got some water and went back to work.
 

baymule

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Hidden treasures appeared. A pile of T-posts that were pulled out of the front fence, piles of wood posts, both put up on concrete blocks to keep them out of the dirt.
A big pile of still new unused T-posts and some more used ones, plus a few more wood posts.

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Now a pickup truck load of this chopped mess. Thinking about tossing it in the sheep lots where it gets so muddy

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Shades-of-Oregon

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I take the tractor and mow them suckers down before they set seed. I have to keep the pastures clean for the horses and to keep ground critters out. I rotate the pastures for treatment every year for weeds and poisonous weeds , flowers and.wild blackberries. I have a daily pasture check to discourage the mule deer and antelope from sneaking in, no scat left behind. The pastures is next to a forest with lots of Doug fir , pine , maples and old growth sequoias.

in electric IMG_6424.jpegIMG_6415.jpegIMG_6417.jpegIMG_6418.jpegIMG_6420.jpegIMG_6414.jpegIMG_6406.jpeg
 

Shades-of-Oregon

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@baymule thank you so much for you nice comment. Coming from a like minded hard worker who knows just what it takes to keep fields and pastures clean and healthy for livestock, put a big smile on my face.
 

SPedigrees

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Hidden treasures appeared. A pile of T-posts that were pulled out of the front fence, piles of wood posts, both put up on concrete blocks to keep them out of the dirt.
A big pile of still new unused T-posts and some more used ones, plus a few more wood posts.
Were these left by the previous owner? You made a haul for sure!
 

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