Tell us something we don’t know.

   / Tell us something we don’t know. #1,251  
Tell us something we don’t know:

Go to google.

put in

“site:tractorbynet.com tell us something we don’t know”

reap information

site:website.com followed by what you want to search for searches only that specific website for what you want.
 
   / Tell us something we don’t know. #1,252  
Tell us something we don’t know:

Go to google.

put in

“site:tractorbynet.com tell us something we don’t know”

reap information

site:website.com followed by what you want to search for searches only that specific website for what you want.
is there a Google instructions page?
 
   / Tell us something we don’t know. #1,254  
is there a Google instructions page?
Start here, and then go on to the pages at the bottom, especially advanced search. People will bow down at your Google-Fu expertise.

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Tell us something we don’t know. #1,255  
Reminds me of picking a fresh piece of broccoli in my mother in-law's garden and taking a nice bite out if it right there. As I'm chewing it up, I see about half a dozen green worm halves squirming around in the piece I just bit from. 😛
Those small green worms are common in broccoli. When I bring some in from the garden I wash them in a large bowl and sprinkle the broccoli heavily with salt. Salt causes the worms to let go and they float to the top. So far I haven’t seen any worms in broccoli this year.
 
   / Tell us something we don’t know. #1,256  
Those small green worms are common in broccoli. When I bring some in from the garden I wash them in a large bowl and sprinkle the broccoli heavily with salt. Salt causes the worms to let go and they float to the top. So far I haven’t seen any worms in broccoli this year.
So far, the only thing I’ve noticed in my broccoli is deer tracks. :)
 
   / Tell us something we don’t know. #1,257  
I thought all you Oilfield Hands and others would enjoy this.

As a side note, during the War, anyone working on Oil Rigs was exempt from the Draft and was required to stay on the job as long as required. If a hand didn't show up for work, the Sheriff was dispatched to find out why.

THE OIL PATCH WARRIORS OF WORLD WAR II

Seventy-five years ago this month, a Band of Roughnecks went abroad on a top secret mission into Robin Hood's stomping grounds to punch oil wells to help fuel England's war machines.

It's a story that should make any oilman or woman proud.

The year was 1943 and England was mired in World War II. U-boats attacked supply vessels, choking off badly needed supplies to the island nation. But oil was the commodity they needed the most as they warred with Germany.

A book "The Secret of Sherwood Forest: Oil Production in England During World War II" written by Guy Woodward and Grace Steele Woodward was published in 1973, and tells the obscure story of the American oil men who went to England to bore wells in a top secret mission in March 1943.

England had but one oil field, in Sherwood Forest of all places. Its meager output of 300 barrels a day was literally a drop in the bucket of their requirement of 150,000 barrels a day to fuel their war machines.

Then a top secret plan was devised: to send some Americans and their expertise to assist in developing the field. Oklahoma based Noble Drilling Company, along with Fain-Porter signed a one year contract to drill 100 wells for England, merely for costs and expenses.

42 drillers and roughnecks from Texas and Oklahoma, most in their teens and early twenties volunteered for the mission to go abroad. The hands embarked for England in March 1943 aboard the HMS Queen Elizabeth. Four National 50 drilling rigs were loaded onto ships but only three of them made landfall; the Nazi U-boats sank one of the rigs een route to the UK.

The Brits' jaws dropped as the Yanks began punching the wells in a week, compared to five to eight weeks for their British counterparts. They worked 12 hour tours, 7 days a week and within a year, the Americans had drilled 106 wells and England oil production shot up from 300 barrels a day to over 300,000

The contract fulfilled, the American oil men departed England in late March 1944. But only 41 hands were on board the return voyage. Herman Douthit, a Texan derrick-hand was killed during the operation. He was laid to rest with full military honors, and remains the only civilian to be buried at The American Military Cemetery in Cambridge.

"The Oil Patch Warrior," a seven foot bronze statue of a roughneck holding a four foot pipe wrench stands near Nottingham England to honor the American oil men's assistance and sacrifice in the war. A replica was placed in Ardmore Oklahoma in 2001

It is by no means a stretch to state that without the American mission, we might all be speaking German today.

Special thanks to the American Oil and Gas History.
 
 
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