Owning a small tractor is a blessing.

   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing. #82  
1950 style Bumper jack. The bottom metal plate was Notorious for falling over sideways. View attachment 3578831
Not to mention that they didn't always grip the bumper very well either.
Had a '65 Impala when I was in my early 20s, front bumper was so high off the ground that the jack was almost to the top by the time the tire was off the ground. More than once was glad I had blocks under it!
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing.
  • Thread Starter
#83  
My '86 Ford LTD Crown Victoria had a little slot that a metal tab on the bumper jack would slip into. It was my first car, and I used that jack a lot. Looking back, I don't know how it ever worked worth a damn, I'd never trust it now.
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing. #84  
My '86 Ford LTD Crown Victoria had a little slot that a metal tab on the bumper jack would slip into. It was my first car, and I used that jack a lot. Looking back, I don't know how it ever worked worth a damn, I'd never trust it now.
I know that setup. BTDT..... Bent a few of them.
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing.
  • Thread Starter
#85  
20250616_135640.jpg

Over the weekend I got that front yard mowed, well so much as I can call it that. I was pretty excited that things were going my way, so I started on the back yard.

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I didn't hit that tarp, but merely got too close; the vacuum effect was impressive. That tarp was sucked off the pile of wood it was covering before I knew it. Fortunately it only tangled in the blades, I shut it down before it got into the spindles.

I almost got through the remainder of the back yard when I encountered a familiar problem. It wasn't a rock this time, but finding a rut that the Kioti had made early spring. I felt this one.

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I just took the bent blade off and played the rest of the game with half a deck.

I must say, however, I'm real impressed with the XT2 itself. I'm beating the hell out of the poor thing, and it's been a trooper.
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing. #87  
After two years of inactivity I broke the garden plot up; a box blade is not the best tool for the job, but it's what I have.

This rock came as a bit of a surprise when the shanks caught it.

View attachment 3642528
Rocks are our best crop. It always amazes me that they've been picking them out of the potato fields for 150 years, yet still find more each year. Then I see members like Sawyer Rob posting pictures of the soil he turns and I can understand why farmers abandoned their land here and headed west.
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing.
  • Thread Starter
#88  
Rocks are our best crop. It always amazes me that they've been picking them out of the potato fields for 150 years, yet still find more each year. Then I see members like Sawyer Rob posting pictures of the soil he turns and I can understand why farmers abandoned their land here and headed west.

It's bringing back a lot of memories from when I was a kid, a lot of remembering how much I hated picking up rocks...

Thankfully, now I have my own children.
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing. #89  
My soil is typed "Telos-Chesuncook", and "Chesuncook-Telos." Translated it means "small rocks with a little soil mixed in. At one time I had picked the part I till pretty good. Then I had a brainstorm of plowing it deeper than normal to bury the weeds. Now I have to pick it again.
The clue should have been the number of times I tripped the plow on buried rocks.
 
   / Owning a small tractor is a blessing. #90  
In the farming days I hit innumerable rocks over the years.
2 standout.
I was v-plowing in the orchard.
Not deep, maybe 8-10".
That ground had been worked for a 100 years or more and most recently when we put the peach orchard in.
How did this monster hide so close to the surface for so long?
I was zipping along in 1st high, kinda bored, then I was almost on the hood of the tractor.
The v-plow caught the rock, got bent all out of shape and almost stalled the Massey.
How it didn't break the lift arms off the tractor?
Similar in another orchard block I was preparing for planting.
Ploughing up aboot 10 acres, boredom sets in.
The rock was shaped like the old rubber erasers we had in school.
Aboot 2' wide, 5' long and 18" thick.
It was sitting at around a 30 degree angle long way down a foot or so underground.
The plow went under the high end and again stopped the tractor instantly with me over the steering wheel almost losing teeth on the hood.
I give Massey every credit for building a tough rear end.
This rock took the neighbors backhoe to dig out.
Again! Where and how do these rocks hide out for so long and then one day just show up?
Not just the fist sized ones but the big SOBs.
Then where does driveway gravel go?
 

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