lilranch2001
Super Member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2009
- Messages
- 9,031
- Tractor
- Bobcat CT 235
Anyone other than an idiot would think it cannot happen!
I vote for already dead. Fits the description. Isn't there some toxicology report they can do to determine if she was dead before the mower struck?Another thing about this. So person is sleeping in the weeds and brush comes by maybe 2-3 ft away on the pass before it eats you alive! How in the hell do you not wake up, jump up, and get the hell outta there?
This person had to be in an unconscious drunken stupor, in a drug comma, or already dead. INMHO
Poachers.Unsure what a poach is?
How do chains keep things from flying around? I’ve read about rocks shooting thru the mower decks, so, how would chains stop a rock? Or anything?My rubber skirts started chunking out and I ignored it for a time until I mowed over a small pile of DG with pebbles in it. After being "shotgunned" to the back of my head and neck, I fabricated bolt on chain guards out of angle iron and 5/16" chain.
Put that welder to work!
Several people have told about running over deer.
“Running with the bucket low-ish and tilted up is a better solution than blade straight and level.” Why is that way better? Seems like in either case you could get tossed off the tractor. I’ve stood up now and then but I’ll think twice about it.I'd be careful running with the loader down low when bushhogging. I've tried that trick in thick weeds and found a stump that bent me WAY over the steering wheel when standing on an open station tractor to see better. I don't want to hit stumps or whatever but I'd much rather have a repair bill than run myself over with the mower after being thrown from the tractor. Running with the bucket low-ish and tilted up is a better solution than blade straight and level.
As for the original post, it's really easy to hit things you don't see in heavy weeds and next to impossible to scout every square inch by foot beforehand. The use of the term "lawnmower" confuses people, especially since the article showed the nicely manicured lawns of the park but not the tall weeds mentioned in the text of the article. The "lawnmower" was likely a farm tractor. I commonly mow dense weeds 3-4 feet tall and sometimes brush higher than the tractor. My tractors could easily run over someone and I'd never notice the difference between that or a rock, stump, or other commonly ignored obstruction while mowing. Plus, some mowers are wider than the tractor itself. Picture the big batwing mowers used on highways. It's a tragedy but likely only avoidable by the victim herself. I'd expect most people to be awakened well before being run over unless they were under the influence or, possibly, they were sleeping where the first pass was taking place and woke in a daze.
Friend of mine was loading his dozer on a trailer that was parked next to mine. As it broke over the ramps a hammer that he used to knock the pins out of his root rake slid back and locked up his steering clutch. Machine spun around and hit my trailer, he was more upset that I was, years later he ended up buying that trailer from me. Still had a crease on the fender from that fateful day.just mowed the back of the property, about 3 acres +-.
My hammer fell out of the tool box.
The greedy Bush-Hog gobbled it up and flung it a good 100+- feet across the field.
I've had a hammer there for countless years on numerous tractors.
First time this happened.
Yes I get that. Had to ride the clutch to get tractor and bushog going all at once. Couldn't stop quick. Dangerous. I used it for mowing for 40 years but I understood it and grew up on it. When I sold it I stressed the problem to the buyer.the local dealer won't take a Ford 9n in trade because of liability issues stemming from that PTO system
I still have days that I miss my 8N, it was fun, it was nimble and it was a challenge.Yes I get that. Had to ride the clutch to get tractor and bushog going all at once. Couldn't stop quick. Dangerous. I used it for mowing for 40 years but I understood it and grew up on it. When I sold it I stressed the problem to the buyer.
1939 model and still running.
The Kubota is a dream compared to that 9n.
If it's angled up then you're more likely to thump the stump with the body of the bucket and it'll ride up and over while still giving you the feeling of impact. If you hit a stump with the blade at the lowest point then you're pretty much guaranteed to fetch up the tractor unless it's a small stump that you wouldn't have to worry much about anyway.“Running with the bucket low-ish and tilted up is a better solution than blade straight and level.” Why is that way better? Seems like in either case you could get tossed off the tractor. I’ve stood up now and then but I’ll think twice about it.
Does this mean you were born so intelligent and all knowing you didn't have to learn anything?Once stupid, always stupid. You just can't unteach that.![]()
Does this mean you were born so intelligent and all knowing you didn't have to learn anything?
Especially if it's a female drug addict.A human body can be quite small.