Welcome to Fearl Bridge Farm. We are starting our berry patch and perrenial garden from scratch! We are very excited about the endless possibilities and potential our property has. We are planting Blackberries, Raspberries, Blueberries, Sunflowers, Apple Trees, Cherry Trees and Pumpkins. We will be having a farm stand as well as inviting people to experience our farm first hand while picking their own fresh berries.
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@@CogentConsult thanks for watching! I just scrape it off with a cheap paint scraper and wipe it off on an old piece of cardboard… then I just chuck the cardboard…. 👍😎 take care!!
Thank you for this video, your fence looks great! This gate is exactly what I can install in my garden. Love the idea of the wheel at the bottom of the gate, that's genius and the curve you placed to reduce the tension on the pvc pipe. this can work and will save alot of money too!
This is one way, complex complicated. It would have been another way to do is to attack a 2x4 to the stake and clamped, and just use regular large hinges for the door.
Black dog was like safety officer it went for the foreman to come check the job time after time they are really good at they jobs you also dug a good track in the dirt
I had to cut overgrown grass off the edges of a driveway cause it was so thick the line trimmer wouldn’t touch it. I used that same idea to follow the edge of the concrete driveway and it worked like a charm. I did put the blade on my grinder and create more of a knife edge , and that worked better than the offset teeth. Wound up with small blocks of sod to transplant.
It will go faster and better if you lay the fence wire on the ground, use a few cheap Harbor Freight tent stakes to hold the end in place, and roll the fence wire on the ground and cut to length (if necessary) stand the fence up stretch it and run down the line with the wire.
I had to trench for a hose pipe recently and found, if a flat spade is pushed vertically into the ground, (ground can't be too hard) and then forced forward and back, it will produce a V, enough to push hose into. Simply push the hose into the V and tread the sides of the V flat.
I only watched a minute and a half to see what blade you used. There's another video somewhere on RU-vid that shows using a "trenching spade" to do a similar job for running wire. Such a spade is flat so it makes a hole straight down, and can be moved side to side to open that hole into a V shape. What I'm thinking is something between these two methods: Use the Sawzall to cut a single cut, then use a spade to move it side to side, avoiding the need to make a second cut or to lift sod. This could be the best of both worlds because the Sawzall could easily cut sod and roots that would be slow to penetrate with a trenching spade. Thanks for the idea.
@@fearlbridgefarms9409 I had a notion of putting fly paper on top of my tilly hat. Bet the wives wouldn't like that either, lol. Look forward to checking out more of your videos. My channels been neglected for years now. Hate editing.
We used that product or similar around the base of all our fruit trees. Always caught lots of bugs. Plenty more just landed on the tree. Looks like a better use for it.
thanks so much for the tutorial. just picked up a 70 Monkey Ward with a tiller attached and need to remove the tiller and get it running. now i know how
You mentioned rocks in your soil. This looks like a great idea if you have to deal with roots too. I wonder how long of a blade could be incorporated for a deeper ditch. 🤔
youtube recommends alot of stuff that helps me but I'm not doing this. not going to even try it. okay I might see if it works. nevermind I'm not going to waste anymore time than this comment.
Got that same dang quad (in better shape and that bitcx# runs like a champ!!) and the deer flies on our property have been HELL!!!! Thanks bud. Gonna give this a go, grab a beer and drive round our acres for a few. (which ought to give our distant neighbors yet another thing to laugh and say we're cray for!!)
If you're only running a line a few inches underground..you can use a edger tool to create the trench very quickly too. Generally speaking however, anything carrying a liquid should be placed below the frost line in your area. Unless of course it's going to be used for sprinklers or drip irrigation, in which case you would blow out those lines each fall anyway...or pump RV antifreeze into the system.
😊I've been trenching with my DeWalt for years. Also run the blade around my beds every year to cut the roots back. Water, dirt and mud have never hurt it. Just don't expect the blade to last long.
Your "trenching with a sawzall" video popped up in my feed (great video btw), which then lead me here. It's easy to edit a video to make it look like you're an expert that never makes a mistake. Posting a video where things don't turn out exactly as planned is much harder. Having watched this I learned some neat tricks I wouldn't have thought of, plus some things to avoid. Also, the video clips you insert are excellent!
Trenching is dangerous on my property as you don't know what you may inadvertently cut! And that include s roots that may damage vegetation. If you do chance it spray it so you know where you cut!