You're welcome!I like where this thread has went.
Some people get POed for thread drift, he's thanking us. :thumbsup:You're welcome!
Now someone explain to me the trick to getting a sack open, such as one has been stitched at the top like a bag of lump charcoal or briquettes. I 'seam' to remember it was as simple as pulling a 'rip' cord. I can't figure out how it's done now. :confused3: :mur:
Yeah, maybe this belongs in the 'you know your'e getting older thread' :laughing:
You're welcome!
Now someone explain to me the trick to getting a sack open, such as one has been stitched at the top like a bag of lump charcoal or briquettes. I 'seam' to remember it was as simple as pulling a 'rip' cord. I can't figure out how it's done now. :confused3: :mur:
Yeah, maybe this belongs in the 'you know your'e getting older thread' :laughing:
Plan A hasn't been working lately and I guess my impatience causes me to almost immediately go to Plan B in frustration and pull out my Leatherman tool.Some people get POed for thread drift, he's thanking us. :thumbsup:
You have to pick at the end of the string, on the side of the bag with the paper on it. Pull it out carefully at first, and it should come easily.
When it doesn't, you take a knife and slit the edge of the bag.
You're welcome!
Now someone explain to me the trick to getting a sack open, such as one has been stitched at the top like a bag of lump charcoal or briquettes. I 'seam' to remember it was as simple as pulling a 'rip' cord. I can't figure out how it's done now. :confused3: :mur:
Yeah, maybe this belongs in the 'you know your'e getting older thread' :laughing:
In my younger days of cow feed being in sewed burlap bags the stitch was a bit different you had to undo the first stitch and pull both threads to remove it,
wow to anyone who even considered reaching for a pocket knife to slice a burlap bag your aXX would have been grass about that time.
Yep. My grandfather kept burlap bags. Did he return them? I never knew the reason only that you don’t cut them open.
My grandfather next door (born late 1800s) worked at his Dad's General Store. Back then everything came in those sacks...flour, sugar, salt, etc. Grandad said these two old maids asked Great-Grandad to save them because they made bloomers out of them.I heard they were taken back to the feed store, who reused them. We called them "Gunny sacks" or "Tow (maybe toe) sacks".





In 45 days I'll turn 69. I learned something simple today.![]()
I heard they were taken back to the feed store, who reused them. We called them "Gunny sacks" or "Tow (maybe toe) sacks".
Need a thread fileSometimes I’ll bugger up the treads on the part that’s through the nut so it can’t back off.




That's it - it's the mouses fault!This reminds me of when our company痴 bank (hint: stage coach logo) mistakenly closed our payroll checking account one Friday evening. Talk about being in a panic on Monday morning. Somebody clicked the wrong box with their mouse.
:thumbsup::thumbsup:A follow-up on the mysterious two closed threads back on 09/02. I found that if I'm logged in to TBN, and scroll through a list of threads, if my left thumb bounces on the envelope icons, the iPad touchscreen saw it as a double click. Double clicking on an envelope when you have moderator powers toggles state between closed and opened threads, depending on it's current state. I knew this on PC, but did not on iPad. I figured it out when I went to read a thread, bumped the envelope instead of the link, and it closed on me. So I'm pretty sure it was me that closed those two. I'll be a bit more careful where my left thumb rides on the screen and apologize for the inconvenience.
Just thought some of you would like to know that those two were not intentional. All the others, pretty much so.![]()
Need a thread file![]()
Burlap or the later nylon weaved feed sacks, we called them Croaker sacks. Do not know why.
Farmers reused them for storing farm milled hog feed or for the pecans we picked up to sell. Sewed them closed with baling or electric fence wire.