A while since I was on my farm...

/ A while since I was on my farm... #1  

Agvg

Elite Member
Joined
May 25, 2013
Messages
3,184
Location
Norway
Tractor
Mf135, Ursus C-355, David Brown 995
This is usually a lawn mower job ;) IMG_20170705_102710.jpg1499243567796.jpeg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm... #3  
Definitely my idea of how Norway looks. Beautiful.
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#4  
A shame that I have nothing that can use the grasIMG_20170705_125757.jpgIMG_20170705_122615.jpg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#5  
Nice tractor, excuse for the dull view ;)IMG_20170705_130248.jpg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#6  
Some stonesIMG_20170705_131028.jpgIMG_20170705_131033.jpgIMG_20170705_131207.jpg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#7  
Some small rocks1499253671116.jpeg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#9  
IMG_20160307_091221_1.jpgIMG_20160321_181201.jpg

Some from late winter, not to much snow and not to cold but it can go under -15c on the coldest days
 
/ A while since I was on my farm... #10  
I have a lawnmower kind of like that but different. :rolleyes: It's handy for tall grass where the tractor won't go.
 
/ A while since I was on my farm... #11  
It looks like you have a neat system for handling and storing firewood. What species are you burning?

Steve
 
/ A while since I was on my farm... #14  
Thank you for the pictures. Easy to forget how much is out there, when your in OHIO.
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#15  
I was gonna ask if you were collecting the forages, you need a few cattle lol

Your FEL curls with cable? That's a new one for me
Yes, you takes what you have

The plan is to build a hydraulic solution but haven't gotten so fare.
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#16  
Real solution ;)1499332174823.jpeg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#17  
Grey Alder, not the best but its growing everywhere and on such places that is accessible with tractor and winch, have a lot of better wood but then you have to carry it to the nearest road so that is not an option. In the old days they had wires from the mountain sides down to the road and they sendt wood and other things town the wire on hooks or lighter stuff they used a pully on the wire.
 
/ A while since I was on my farm... #18  
Grey Alder, not the best but its growing everywhere and on such places that is accessible with tractor and winch, have a lot of better wood but then you have to carry it to the nearest road so that is not an option. In the old days they had wires from the mountain sides down to the road and they sendt wood and other things town the wire on hooks or lighter stuff they used a pully on the wire.

Around here they call it high line logging. ;) Your place is even steeper than mine. I only have a couple vertical rock faces, though one of them has a nice waterfall when it rains. Mostly the slopes are around 45 degrees.

Waterfall.jpg
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#19  
They was used for much more than logging, it was a permanent setup and goods ad cheese from the summer farms in the mountains was sent down those lines.
 
/ A while since I was on my farm...
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#20  
Here you se the wire at the top
f0b435d22a688298feb162eb7bcb484e.jpg
 
 
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