Too much work !!

   / Too much work !! #11  
You guys wait till you are over ninety as I am.......living alone......doing all the indoor and outdoor chores.......

Thanks be to God I can still take care of things and myself. My two Kubotas, Case and attachments help me get by from day to day.......but it ain't easy. I'd love to be 89 YO again. I don't use the axe, the mattock, the shovels, the hoe etc much anymore and quit shoveling snow.

Took 2 one hour naps today and not going outside in this 88 degree heat for nuttin.

Yet, two weeks ago, I fell two dead pines and burned the slash from several wind storms....

Cheers,
Mike
 
   / Too much work !! #12  
I got my tractor as a retirement gift for myself in 2011. A bright shiny new Kioti CK20S hydro. The first two years I had it I did much landscaping in my front and back yards. Dirt dug out to put a trailer storage area in the back was moved a bucket at a time to become flower filled landscaping in the front. I was in my late fifties when I did all this.

Now I'm seventy years old. And on my second dump truck of mulch to cover all this landscaping. Yep, two single axle dump truck loads of dark brown mulch. And I'm not finished yet. Go thru and pull out the unwanted weeds and vegetation. Use Roundup on the small stuff. Dump a scoop of mulch and rake it out even. Then down on hands and knees to uncover the smaller Hosta and other plants. Repeat. Repeat again. And repeat the process again. I'm afraid I may have to spend some of my kids inheritance to hire this done the next time.

But it looks good.

RSKY
Once being retire sometimes one has towonder how the got the thing I want to list done and still work 40+ hour job.
 
   / Too much work !! #13  
next month, I'm 75 and if any of you want to come here to the farm and help me cut, rake and bale hay, come on... I'll even pay you 15 bucks an hour and my wife will feed you as well and I provide the beverages, just not any alcoholic. really, it's 100 % tractor work and the tractor that runs the bailer is climate controlled, has an air ride seat and a killer FM radio as well. PM me if interested....
 
   / Too much work !! #14  
RISKY - a lot of us would consider you as still a "YOUNG-ONE". I live alone, try to take good care of myself and not do anything too stupid.

I take less chances - now that I'm alone out here. Things that I use to jump right on - now are just a minor irritant and left for Mother Nature to handle.

Be careful - be safe - live long.
 
   / Too much work !!
  • Thread Starter
#15  
RISKY - a lot of us would consider you as still a "YOUNG-ONE". I live alone, try to take good care of myself and not do anything too stupid.

I take less chances - now that I'm alone out here. Things that I use to jump right on - now are just a minor irritant and left for Mother Nature to handle.

Be careful - be safe - live long.

Good advice.

Now that half load of mulch remaining is on hold. We started painting the master bedroom last week when it was so hot and have run into problems. Gotta cut, paint, and install NEW baseboards. Old ones in terrible shape. One year old granddaughter sick and we're keeping her all week. Two other grands here for three days also. And I've GOT to get the eleven posts pounded into the ground to install fence sections for the pole type green beans in the garden.

Time to prioritize and not start another job until all these complete.

RSKY
 
   / Too much work !! #16  
Well - yesterday I got all the old homestead buildings ( 2 ) torn down - scooped up - moved to my winter burn pile. I MADE IT without picking up any nails in the tractor tires. This fall when it cools down - more sweeps with the metal detector to get any last nails/spikes.

I'm going to borrow the neighbors pto rototiller and scuff up the old homestead building area. Bring up the last of the nails/spikes.

No matter what I do. This area will always be a NO GO area for the tractor in the future. It's simply unbelievable how many nails/spikes I've found so far. He must have dropped 2 or 3 for every one he hammered in to these old buildings. I've never seen so many square shanked spikes and nails.
 
   / Too much work !! #17  
Well I went into the office at 7, and worked until 5:30, yesterday.

Then went home and mowed the lawn for two hours.

Watered all the flowers for the misses since she is out of town on Business.

Took a business call at 8 for a client in Singapore.

Took the dog for a walk at 9.

Had dinner at 9:45.

Went to bed at 11.

My schedule is like this most days...
 
   / Too much work !! #18  
next month, I'm 75 and if any of you want to come here to the farm and help me cut, rake and bale hay, come on... I'll even pay you 15 bucks an hour and my wife will feed you as well and I provide the beverages, just not any alcoholic. really, it's 100 % tractor work and the tractor that runs the bailer is climate controlled, has an air ride seat and a killer FM radio as well. PM me if interested....
I'm on my way - just don't tell my wife or dog. :ROFLMAO:
 
   / Too much work !! #19  
Well - yesterday I got all the old homestead buildings ( 2 ) torn down - scooped up - moved to my winter burn pile. I MADE IT without picking up any nails in the tractor tires. This fall when it cools down - more sweeps with the metal detector to get any last nails/spikes.

I'm going to borrow the neighbors pto rototiller and scuff up the old homestead building area. Bring up the last of the nails/spikes.

No matter what I do. This area will always be a NO GO area for the tractor in the future. It's simply unbelievable how many nails/spikes I've found so far. He must have dropped 2 or 3 for every one he hammered in to these old buildings. I've never seen so many square shanked spikes and nails.

Speaking from experience, even rototilling isn't going to get them all. At least fifty years later, I'm still picking up loose nails from construction here, and that doesn't count the three or four times a year that I run a magnetic sweeper over the area. (Livestock in the area.)

I wonder if the prior barns burned down before being rebuilt. Any history of an older trading post on the site? (Would have been a great site next to the lake...)

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Too much work !! #20  
A couple of years ago, we started converting sections of the yard to hardscape. We put down landscape cloth and covered it with various types of decorative stone. The tractor makes it easy to move and put down the stone and once done, it's maintenance free.
No such thing as maintenance free. How long before dust (windblown or piggybacking on rain/snow) starts to accumulate and wind-blown seeds take root? It'll happen.
To me, lawn is about the lowest maintenance. I'm not talking about a fancy manicured "city" lawn with only certain types of grass, I mean what we call "north country green" around here...a mix of grass, dandelions, clover, various wildflowers and whatever else grows there. Keep it mowed, and it looks fine from 10+' away. :p
 

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