Gem99ultra
Elite Member
Nah, not the right answer. Using any logic to this question (what was the question again?) is lunacy. The real answer is yet to come.WHAT? Did we just come up with an actual answer? Holy Cow!
Nah, not the right answer. Using any logic to this question (what was the question again?) is lunacy. The real answer is yet to come.WHAT? Did we just come up with an actual answer? Holy Cow!
I don't know .. Heck I was just throwing out my best guess for the ppall
Above is what Sparc said was grown in the fields. Unless the soybeans were cooked for human consumption they'd likely have been combined and not stacked on pallets.These appearon multiple farms. Crops vary from tomatoes, soybean, and others but I did notice that none of the fields used for corn this past season have them.
I'll have to get some photos next time I have areal camera in the truck, the phone camera is not good enough to show them at these distances.
Seeing as you're a new member, a few of us who've been enjoying this silly thread for years will try and overlook your coming up with an explanation that might end it. I can't say about the rest so, watch your back.They are pallets used to place produce...tomatoes and beans on when picking during harvest season, left standing to minimize rot during winter and utilized each fall.
No, this is not the answer. It is not even the beginning of the answer. But it is, perhaps, the answer for those unaware.They are pallets used to place produce...tomatoes and beans on when picking during harvest season, left standing to minimize rot during winter and utilized each fall.
@treborterbThey are pallets used to place produce...tomatoes and beans on when picking during harvest season, left standing to minimize rot during winter and utilized each fall.
Philm56,@treborterb
As a fellow newbie I hope you have learned your lesson. They have only begun to show you the error of your ways. Besides, your proposal doesn't even begin to address the scat.
Your going to fit in around here just fine.@treborterb
As a fellow newbie I hope you have learned your lesson. They have only begun to show you the error of your ways. Besides, your proposal doesn't even begin to address the scat.
Don't worry. Sparc would have to weigh in and give his assessment of said explanation. Probably not gonna happen any time soon.WHAT? Did we just come up with an actual answer? Holy Cow!
I'm probably beyond help. On another note, I'm glad you're still hanging around enjoying the spectacle with us.10 demerits for everyone contributing to the delinquency of a noob...!
Most of you are beyond help but at least have some pity on the naive, gullible and vulnerable members that are still wet behind the ears...!
This is the kind of deductive reasoning that unfortunately is born out by the lack of socializing, wearing a mask too long, and rebreathing depleted air.They are pallets used to place produce...tomatoes and beans on when picking during harvest season, left standing to minimize rot during winter and utilized each fall.
I was out surveying the old homestead site here. One of these days I have to clean up all the old barn and chicken coop wood and burn it. It will be a manual job, by hand, because of all the nails/spikes the homesteader used. Buried under a mound of pine needles, limbs, associated trash - an old wooden pallet. It had the name of an old wheat Co-Op burned into the side rail. Amber Grain Co-Op. Sitting on the pallet - a wood box with the homesteaders name and address stenciled on it. That pallet and box are close to 100 years old. The box was the size of an apple box but heavier wood. It was half full of old dry cell batteries. All, rotten to the core. The homesteader never had electricity here. The old batteries were used to power a radio. It was the only form of entertainment they had in those days.
No phone, no electricity, no legal access. By hand shake agreement - they came onto this property thru an old road on the neighbors property.
I'm rather interested now. After finding the old pallet & box - wonder what else is out there to be found.
Yes, 2Lane - Whites's metal detector. Out in the old homestead area it lights up like a Christmas tree. I don't think there was ever a spike that the old homesteader didn't like. The "old homestead area" isn't really that large. An old two story barn and chicken house was all that was there.
Can you just imagine - the homesteader and his wife lived in a single room off the chicken house while their permanent house was built. Timing must have been a major constraint. Man - I would have stayed in the second story of the barn. Long before I took up temporary residence in a room just off the chicken house. This homesteader had chickens and sheep. No cows.
Whatever. This area is 50' by about 80'. Not a really large area. Wish I could first burn the area off. Just too much chance of starting a fire that I can't contain.
So ..... one of these days. Big heavy garden rake and slowly clear this area.
After I've done my very best to clear this area....... then the metal detector. Find any spike, nail, etc that have been missed. I'd post pictures but all you would see is dry weeds and lumpy ground.
In my mind - I still remember coming here with my father in '48 or '49. The barn and chicken house were there and still in use. Wish somebody had taken pictures. I met the old homesteader and his wife. I remember how old he appeared and he smelled strongly of pipe smoke. Fortunately - I do have an ancient picture of the both of them.
I figured politics entered into the equation somewhere. I have learned that physical scientists, engineers and administrators do not think like biologists, and sometimes do not have an appreciation for the variability of biological entities, nor the dangers of exposures to chemicals, etc.Honestly you would think a microbiologist would know better than to even try doing that,