bp fick
Super Member
I have noticed he posts alot, I think, just to run up his post count. Just MHO zman![]()
He's seems to be a really great kid. Enthusiastic. There's worse things for a kid to be fixated with.
I have noticed he posts alot, I think, just to run up his post count. Just MHO zman![]()
He's seems to be a really great kid. Enthusiastic. There's worse things for a kid to be fixated with.
There is something about the cold that is different too.
When I got home to my warm 33 degree winter, I was cold again.![]()
Johndeere3720 said:I think he's trying to catch up to my post count.:laughing:But being on here keeps us youguns' busy. it gives us a place to learn from others experiences and express our opinions on tractors. :thumbsup:
Or you can put extensions on your rear blade for your 2240. :thumbsup:
Alan,I like the cold weather in Texas better than the hot weather here in summer. To me what the shade tree in August offers is survival, not "cooling". But 30 degrees here feels alot colder than 30 degrees in New Mexico or Colorado when we go skiing. Its the humidity and wind that does it.
I unloaded my new smoker on about 12/1/10 and my tractor has not been used since that day.
The dozer looks like fun, but on a nice day it will beat you up something fierce. On a freezing cold day, it will punish you down to yoru bones and then some. The cold starts at your feet. 40,000 pounds of steel will never warm up no matter how lond you run it at full throttle. It just gets colder and more painful. I really don't know of anything like it, and have done it enough times to realize that I'm not very smart, and it doesn't get any better.
I'm a fair weather, warm day, type of tractor guy!!!!!
Eddie
Alan,
I agree. My ancestors were awarded land grants in what is now Mississippi for their service in the Revolutionary War. My family has been here since then. I was an adult before I enjoyed air conditioning.
I like the cold weather in Mississippi much better than the hot weather. My fields don't have any shade and they are awfully hot and dusty in August.
MY Kubota started easily this morning even though all surface water was frozen. I rode around for awhile, surveying the estate.
My winter project is thinning a stand of southern pines with a chain saw. There is no way I could do that in a Mississippi summer.
In summer we take an annual Escape The Heat trip to Colorado (above 10,000 ft) or to rural Canada far from the big cities and tourist traps. The distance to Colorado or Canada is about the same for us.
We've had a long stretch of below zero days this winter up here! Not the real extreme below zero - 30,40,50 stuff - where I live at least, but the minus 10,15,20 stuff.
And it's the "dry" cold.. we're below average for snowfall this winter, so far.
Been puttin' off cleaning the horse corral thinking it was gonna get warmer... weather forecast is for another week or so of below zero.
So, I was out digging up frozen turds for 3 hours in minus 8F this afternoon! :mur:
(I really hate those long icicles that form on your mustache! Almost as much as the horses hate the hoar frost that forms all over their nostrils and eyelids! They're always trying to rub it off on my pants and coat! Buggars!)
AKfish
My first trip north was to Toronto in early December and although the outdoor thermometers were reading 0, I was running around with my coat open, sweater unbuttoned and flapping my collar to cool off. I know it was not because I was acclimated to it since I had only been in Toronto for under 12 hours.
Here in East Texas, I barely even look at my tractors.
Eddie
How did your hay come out? Did the rain ever let up so you could get it baled?
Quote:
Originally Posted by johnrex62 View Post
My first trip north was to Toronto in early December and although the outdoor thermometers were reading 0, I was running around with my coat open, sweater unbuttoned and flapping my collar to cool off. I know it was not because I was acclimated to it since I had only been in Toronto for under 12 hours.
Sounds like you had a hot flash. :laughing: