Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #75,781  
The talk of burying the Propane tank reminds me of when I first started to school in the first grade, we had a buried tank. Later we moved to a place that had an above ground tank. Now I remember being told that "Propane" tanks were above ground and "Butane" tanks were buried. Is there any truth to that?

Nope.


Natgaz
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,782  
The brush mower is great! A couple of weeks ago I borrowed from a friend a brush cutter (weed-wacker with metal blades). That was pretty cool, but this beats it hands down for anything up to at least an inch diameter!


But of course one tire has gotten some thorn and is now slowly deflating. Hope Slime will fix it, but I've had just mixed results with slime and tube-tires.

I also need to dig up my "mowing hat". I have a red-neck from today.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,783  
The talk of burying the Propane tank reminds me of when I first started to school in the first grade, we had a buried tank. Later we moved to a place that had an above ground tank. Now I remember being told that "Propane" tanks were above ground and "Butane" tanks were buried. Is there any truth to that?

There would be a logic to that. Boiling point of butane is -1C. If the temperature is below that, no boiling, so no gas to burn. Plus, remember that as the butane or propane boils, this is taking heat from the container and the liquid, so it may be, say +5C outside, or even +10C, but as you use the butane, the remaining liquid butane might cool down faster than the ambient temperature air can warm it up, and therefore output and pressure would drop.

Or, to put it differently, unless you're in Siberia, it doesn't matter whether propane is above or below ground (the earth being warmer than the air for the most part in the winter). But above ground butane tanks would stop working for sure anytime the temperature dropped below -1C.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,784  
Currently 84.

Good to hear the positive results with the allergy shots. Hopefully mine are successful also.

Been working on a few projects. Wooden corral fence is done enough to hold animals. Have to add some gates and fence off access to the grain bin.
Trying to load up scrap but that seems to be last on list for each day.
Currently trying to get air conditioners going in chicken coops. Finding several frozen pipes from winter. Now waiting on glue to dry in last one, 3 barns have a/c.

New outdoor combo gas pack goes in House this week. Unhook today. Pour new pad tomorrow and set new one Friday.

Need to finish spreading fertilizer today also.

Went to doctor yesterday about some abdominal pain and a bulge. Pretty sure I have a hernia. Ultrasound Friday and then make a plan. I figure I’ll end up with surgery. Not that I want it but that’s my luck. Can’t think of a single thing I did to cause one. Everything I’m doing is routine and have done for years.

Hopefully everyone else gets better.

Drew. Good luck on garden and cultivating. Key to cultivating is speed. Slow enough to follow the row but fast enough to move dirt. You’re reminding me of my tobacco growing days. Spent hours doing that. Well for years I was the one walking behind the tractor uncovering the plants Dad covered up.

Wife makes fun of my straw hat. Will have to look into some other brand I guess.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,785  
Just got in from cutting a "tree" with the new saw. Got a Stihl MS 193 T and love it, Top handle and light enough to use with one hand and cuts well. Tree was some sort of ornamental evergreen that had about 10 trunks and was over 20 ft high. Got almost all of it on the truck and got hot and came in to drink a gatorade. Go out later and through the rest on the truck and strap it down. It is way above the cab.

Prayers for those in need. Ed
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,786  
Well, some good news this morning...my Woodmaxx 8H chipper has been shipped. I expect it will be delivered next week...unfortunately, I'll be in Connecticut Monday through Wednesday.

While your waiting. Pick up some hydraulic fluid. You will need about 7 gallons.
Still waiting on my flail mower.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,787  
Don- Thanks for that 5:1 rule video. The breakfast cereal mentioned that meets the criteria happens to be our favorite. I was surprised that some "healthy" breakfast cereals like shredded wheat do not (I checked.). The more I look at this and try to figure it out it seems that body inflammation drives cholesterol buildup so addressing one challenge helps address the other. My cholesterol is really not a problem at this point. Hopefully the new "diet" will bring my cholesterol down. I am spending a lot of time finding new recipes and adapting old less healthy recipes to healthier ones with healthier substitutions or cooking techniques. I am interested what my bloodwork will reveal in a couple of weeks and what diet/med tweaking needs to be done. It's a process.

Andrew- Thanks for the Goldini video. That unit works really well; far better than a brushwhacker. I prefer the relative comfort of operating my tractor's rotary cutter when dealing with shrubbery. I am sorry to read about all your tire challenges.

Farmer- I am sorry to read about your "bulge" and pain. I hope all goes well with the ultrasound. Good luck.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,788  
Thanks to both Rick and Andrew. You reminded me of the differences between Propane and Butane.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #75,789  
Andrew- Thanks for the Goldini video. That unit works really well; far better than a brushwhacker. I prefer the relative comfort of operating my tractor's rotary cutter when dealing with shrubbery. I am sorry to read about all your tire challenges.

Were I to be buying a brush mower since getting the Iseki, I also would have gotten one to go on the 3pt hitch. I actually bought it last November or so-- someone listed it on the Czech classifieds for a real good price. Never used. Just getting the adapter made added a bit to the cost.

I'm sure there'll be some cases where this will work better in areas with trees though, where I want to clear out thornbushes, roses, and blackberries and wouldn't be able to go with the tractor. Likewise, it does a better job mowing the yard than the string trimmer, and it would be too tight to go in there all the time with the tractor.

On the other hand, I bet some of the things that stalled the ~14HP motor today wouldn't have been a problem if being driven by a 35HP diesel.

Its going to be seeing a lot of use this summer as I clear out overgrown areas, and after that not nearly so much-- just to get whatever the goats don't get and for cutting paths for walking in the grass before haying or grazing.
 

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