Good morning!!!!

   / Good morning!!!! #45,921  
On the Kohler Magnum 18 I'm inclined to go with a rebuild kit, if not just a complete new Kohler fuel pump.

A Facet electric is also an option I believe:

Facet Electric Fuel Pump - Kirk Engines, Inc.

If you don't know them, and likely you wouldn't, Kirk Engines makes/sources some cool little parts, very reasonably priced.
Have used a number of their products, including the steering ends for the Cub Cadet.
Highly recommended.

headed out to mow on a cool damp morning. Of course before I can get back to the barn I have to pass the garden, and that means out come the
snips while I give it a haircut, needed to keep things from getting on the electric fence. I expect my first tomatoes to start showing up any day.
Which reminds me, I have some organic bug killer I need to carefully spray on the eggplants. Poor things are beginning to look like green swiss cheese.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,922  
One of the trees I just planted was a persimmon. I wanted one because i saw them in full harvest mode at the local rural nursery down the road from me, and the little tree looked like a catalog photo. Big gorgeous fruit I had never seen before. Fruit for a still life bowl... And for me, eggplants are the same. Nice to look at, but not to eat. But there are always those that do marvelous things with them, so they will not be wasted.

Am starting to cut hybrid roses and bringing them in for vases inside. I used to grow them for my late wife, now I grow them for myself. Have grown roses
for a long time. Growing up I tended my grandfather's rose gardens. Both my grandfather and father loved gardens, and kept the three boys in my family hard at work weeding them the old fashioned way. And being the youngest, guess who got to work on the prickly roses? Well, I learned to love them, and yes, I stop and smell them as often as I can.
I'd rather cut most of them, saving a few, and bring them in versus leaving them outside on a bush. I've had whole rose gardens leveled in the past on
one night's tasty foraging by deer, so now, like getting the cherries off the tree before the other critters get them, I bring them in.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,923  
Good morning! All the ponds are overflowing and the ground is a wet sponge. A wintery 63˚ this morning and flooding rains are hitting at 10AM. We will stay put as the roads flood. We are at a high elevation so we will get flooded roads first and then everyone else later today and through tomorrow. I hope the County gets those sighns out, it's too cold for a water rescue.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,924  
49 this morning and headed to 75 today.

Managed to get house wrap on main part of the building yesterday. As well as found the hay rake I'm going to get. Just couldn't pull it home and get dad back in time for his bus route.

Going to move a disc mower this morning and then take wife to doctors appointment. Then maybe I'll have time to pick some strawberries. Nothing like homemade jam.

Drew. Persimmons are very good once ripe. Sweet and soft. My problem is getting to them before the cows and deer. You know they're ripe went it takes no effort to remove them from the tree. But get ahold of a green one and you'll do the persimmon pucker.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,925  
Good Morning! 64F @ 5:30AM. Mostly sunny. High 83F. Winds WSW at 5 to 10 mph.

We'll have showers overnight and into tomorrow, along with much reduced temperatures. After yesterday's baking, I'm looking forward to cooler times.

Eric, I wonder if those desert wells ever were cleared of all that salt? And thanks again for sharing your Father's stories. What a treasure!

Hope you're feeling better Don. And yes, no water rescues, please!

Better make time for those strawberries, Farmer. No sense letting them spoil on the ground.

For years I had a bunch of twenty cent and one cent stamps laying around, back from the times before the "Forever" stamps. Yesterday morning I had a bunch of bills to pay for my Mom's boyfriend's estate, all by mail, so decided to use them. Two twenty cent stamps and seven one centers fit on the envelope easily, but when I got down to the last twenty center, twenty-seven one centers wouldn't have left enough room for the address! Guess I'll have to save 'em for something special. :laughing:

The inside of the pop up roof on the Vanagon came from VW with flocking to control condensation, but it also collected a lot of mildew and mold on the one I have. So yesterday I dove in trying to remove the stuff. The fuzz part came off easily with a dual action air sander, but the glue was another thing all together. Clogged the paper right now. So I got out a wire brush on the little angle grinder, and it was better but not very fast. Then tried a scraper blade on the vibrating cutter, but it either cut the flock or dug down into the fiberglass. Then I remembered the rubber wheels I bought to remove decals from an old motorhome, and thankfully never got a chance to use. Tried one of those, and the glue just laughed at it. Went back to the wire brush idea, and found a cup shaped one with knotted wire bristles. It cut well, but smeared the glue rather than removed it. Then spotted a straight wheel one with coarse unknotted wire, and stuck with that for the rest of the job as it didn't seem to smear the glue as badly. The top was broken into six panels by stiffening ribs, and each panel took about a half hour to strip. And out toward the center I was really having to lean out and stretch to reach, so my back was complaining pretty loudly in no time. So I'd do a section, take a break, then do some more, all the while the sun getting higher and hotter. At the half way point it was noon and I'd had enough. Oh, and the brushing was also releasing bits of fiberglass, and it was all over my arms, neck, and face, and you guessed it, I itched like crazy.

So I went in and cleaned up a little, then had some lunch, then the neighbor called saying he'd be around if I wanted to come down and pick up the car trailer again. He and his wife planted several acres of cherry trees a few years ago, and their big problem now is keeping the birds and foxes away from the fruit. She put a net on one tree, which kept the birds away, but a fox got up under it and broke several branches climbing up to get the fruit. They've live trapped and relocated several foxes at this point, but one seems clever enough to avoid getting caught. So the verdict is still out on how to deal with that one.

By the time I got back from that the sun had worked it's way to the other side of the house, and I noticed that the pop top was now in the shade. So I grabbed the grinder and knocked out another section of flock. Rubbing that stuff off is pretty mindless work, and I remembered seeing two deer spring up from underneath the 24' box trailer as I drove the truck up the driveway to get the trailer, and seeing them run away again as I came back. I don't have anything against deer trying to stay out of the sun, but I don't enjoy being startled every time I walk past the trailer by deer bolting out from under my nose. So I decided to spray some deer repellent under the trailer during my little break. I keep a pump sprayer with the stuff already mixed up, but of course the pump wasn't working. And pulling the pump out of the stinky stuff to fix was no fun, but I did, but not before just dumping what little was left onto the beds that the deer had scooped out of the gravel. Got the sprayer working again, but then found I'd used up all the liquid repellent, replacing it with Deer Scram, which is a powder of (I think) dried blood and pepper. So I put some more of that out, and now I have a sprayer that works and is empty for the next job that comes up. :confused2:

By then a nice breeze had come up, so it was back to the wire brushing. After another section my back was really talkin' to me, so I stretched a little to work the kinks out and it felt a little better. Had to remove the latch mechanism from the pop top to finish wire brushing, and that little break was enough to let the back relax a little more. Between that and being able to work the middle from the end and not have to stretch out so far I was able to get that nasty little job done. Wasn't really looking forward to getting all dirty and itchy for two days running!.

As I write this an entirely different kind of flock, this one made up of Canadian geese, has come up the canyon and made a bee line for the house. They're all catching up on the events of the past evening, or maybe they're encouraging each other to remain in formation, or maybe their eyes aren't so good and they have to keep track of each other by sound, but all that honking and squawking sure makes a lot of noise! Good thing I'm already up because I don't think I'd be able to sleep through that. :laughing:

This afternoon I'll take the trailer into town and pick up the other Vanagon, and run a few errands on the way there. Always fun trying to find a parking place when you're dragging a twenty foot trailer behind you. Before that, if it warms up enough, maybe I'll shoot the last coats of clear on those motorcycle parts I had pin striped a couple weeks ago. I finished color sanding them last night as well, and with rain and cold temps on the way, if I don't do it this morning it'll be a week or more before I get another chance.

Have a good 'un, guys!
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,926  
That saying is very common but not very true. When we raised hogs the location and number of pairs of teats was one of the criteria the bore had to pass. We'd just flip him over if the teats were paired up and he had a minimum of I believe 10 pair (Dad got out of the hog business before I got big enough to help much. He did all that.) he'd be considered. The more the better. If teats were staggered he was bacon.

Interesting farmer, I learned that saying from my grand-pa and we lived on a farm and had all kinds of hog and pigs. I was to young to have to get in on the castration process but sure remember the sequel like a pig thing!!! :shocked:

54 going to a sunny 70.
Off to Doctor appointment, always a fun way to start the day. :yell:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,927  
Mid 50's going to upper 60's today, nice weather through Friday, then a deluge is predicted, and I have to travel to Front Royal, VA and Back on Saturday in that downpour. What's 400 miles in the rain with 2 trips around the DC beltway thrown in?
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,928  
just came in from two hours pushing a trimming mower, needed a break and a cup of coffee.
and a dry shirt. Nice out there but I was getting some good exercise. For sure an alternative to the tread mill.

RNG, I hope you were wearing a respirator; that flocking attack sounds like a Dirty Jobs prospect
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,929  
RNG, I hope you were wearing a respirator; that flocking attack sounds like a Dirty Jobs prospect

No worries, Drew. Safety glasses, ear muffs, industrial grade particle mask, and leather work gloves were all part of my get up. My own mother wouldn't have recognized me, as I came out looking like the Pilsbury Dough Boy. :laughing: Fortunately, a few spritzes from the compressed air hose took care of most of the damage, but my arms still itch today...
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,930  
68°F and .04 inches rain last 24 hours

Be safe
Have a great day
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,931  
66 degrees and we are in the middle of a real frog strangler. As best I can see one of our rain gauges, with binoculars, over 3" so far. Worst hasn't got here yet.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,932  
There are two types of Persimmon. Astringent and non-astrigent. The nonastringent can be eaten when they change to orange although they could be hard. The astringent have to be really ripe to be eatable. I think the change to eatable has something to do with the development of the pips.

Around here the saying was a little more down to earth and was "as useless as **** on a bull" :laughing:
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,933  
Interesting farmer, I learned that saying from my grand-pa and we lived on a farm and had all kinds of hog and pigs. I was to young to have to get in on the castration process but sure remember the sequel like a pig thing!!! :shocked:

54 going to a sunny 70.
Off to Doctor appointment, always a fun way to start the day. :yell:

I found dads old records once. When he got out in the early 90's he was averaging over 11 weaned pigs per sow per litter. Even by today's standards anything over 10 live births is good.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,934  
There are two types of Persimmon. Astringent and non-astrigent. The nonastringent can be eaten when they change to orange although they could be hard. The astringent have to be really ripe to be eatable. I think the change to eatable has something to do with the development of the pips.

Around here the saying was a little more down to earth and was "as useless as **** on a bull" :laughing:

I've even seen orange ones pucker you like a prune, of course possums will eat them anytime.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,935  
66 degrees and we are in the middle of a real frog strangler. As best I can see one of our rain gauges, with binoculars, over 3" so far. Worst hasn't got here yet.

About the same up here, 2" to 3.75" depending on where you are.

Stay dry.
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,936  
I think Drew was talking about the Apple {Fuyu} Persimmons. We have a few of the trees and really like them.

Bare Root 'Jiro' Fuyu Persimmon Tree (Standard) - GrowOrganic.com

1331234433_persimmon.jpg
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,938  
2016-05-20, 0224

45 right now...heading to a very nice 74 today!

Early day in to finish a project...hopefully, an early day out too!
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,939  
52 cloudy and dreary high of 65 heavy rain tonight up to 2in maybe more. A very long stretch of cloudy rainy weather this has been but it's about to change and in a big way too. Good Morning!
 
   / Good morning!!!! #45,940  
First cup of coffee has been drank. 38° with clear skies this morning. Heading to 71° with mostly sunny skies. Good day to put some wax on shaded side of motorhome.
Good Morning All.
 

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