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DiamondSCattleCo Rancher

Joined: 12 Dec 2005 Posts: 1734 Location: NE Saskatchewan
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Posted: Tue Jun 20, 2006 9:55 pm Post subject: |
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| Northern Rancher wrote: |
| Yeah lucky it's a big a... and can take alot of freezing-worse is your hands-I froze my fingers so much as a kid they swell up pretty quick now a days-haven't been able to use the horses much last few years because of no snow-lots of cows fed with horses up here-now with $5.00 diesel there will probably be alot more. |
As soon as I'm done with working off-ranch, I know I'll be going back to feeding with horse and wagon. We've got a set of sleighs and a farm wagon with an interchangeable deck that we used to use 10 or 15 years ago to feed square bales. I'm going to rig a couple arms like those on a truck bale deck, and use a chain hoist on them to lift the bale off the ground.
Rod
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coulee Member

Joined: 28 Mar 2006 Posts: 8 Location: Where there are beef cows
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Faster horses Rancher

Joined: 11 Feb 2005 Posts: 9495 Location: MT/SD
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Posted: Sun Jun 25, 2006 8:10 pm Post subject: |
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| That looks like dandy hay, coulee.
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TXTibbs Rancher

Joined: 09 Apr 2005 Posts: 1079 Location: South Central Texas, former South Dakotan
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Jinglebob Rancher

Joined: 14 Feb 2005 Posts: 5727 Location: Western South Dakota
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Ranch Mom Member

Joined: 20 Nov 2005 Posts: 172 Location: Lacreek, SD
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ranchwife Rancher

Joined: 10 Feb 2005 Posts: 3994 Location: ennis, montana
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Jinglebob Rancher

Joined: 14 Feb 2005 Posts: 5727 Location: Western South Dakota
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TXTibbs Rancher

Joined: 09 Apr 2005 Posts: 1079 Location: South Central Texas, former South Dakotan
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Posted: Tue Jun 27, 2006 7:30 am Post subject: |
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| Jingle Bob is right....if they are built right they are sorta woven together and packed to a degree that the wind generally just bounces off them. There have been some instances when a storm went through and would blow the tops out of them, but not often.
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ranchwife Rancher

Joined: 10 Feb 2005 Posts: 3994 Location: ennis, montana
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Jinglebob Rancher

Joined: 14 Feb 2005 Posts: 5727 Location: Western South Dakota
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Posted: Tue Jun 27, 2006 8:36 am Post subject: |
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Dad always told the story of the old man who homesteaded just east of us. (My family eventually bought the homestedsa fromhis widow).
Phil was a slow moving, but never quit, kind of person. He would leave his tobacco in the house and when he wanted a smoke, he would walk back to the house, from wherever he was on his 900 acre ranch/farm. Dad said he saw him, on a windy day, go on the downwind side of a stack of hay, and clean up all the hay that wasn't on the stack, with a pitchfork. Then he'd carry it around to the upwind side and throw it on top. Most would blow over and land on the ground again. So he would go on the downwind side and clean it up and carry it back and throw it up on top. Again, and again, until as Dad put it, "It was all on top or at least wore out or blew away".
When it was too cold or windy to do anything else, he'd clean his barn and pitych the manure into a wagon and drive it out to the top of a hill and pitch it out. Tuff?????? Tenasious(sp)? Crazy? Ahhh, thats what them oldtimers was made of. 
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Anne M. Shaw Member

Joined: 01 Mar 2008 Posts: 1 Location: Missoula, Montana
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