what percentage of all those bugs do you think were mosquitos? We're having a hellacious year for mosquitos up here in Minnesota. Would love to find a reliable way to thin the swarms.
From their website: 01 | LIGHT LURES INSECTS Lamp generates UV rays to attract flying insects, day and night 02 | FAN PULLS INSECTS IN Fan draws insects into the trap and a damper keeps them there 03 | EASY INSECT DISPOSAL Easily empty the catch basket with just the touch of a button
Picked it up on Facebook marketplace. They made a lot of different attachments for this jawhorse, even a welding attachment. I use them all. I wish Rockwell was still making attachments.
I love this idea! You mentioned when people come over with a dog, you have somewhere to put them. Have you used this with multiple dogs at the same time? How do you do that? How do you keep them from getting tangled? I'd love to do this for our dogs!!
I’m glad you like it :) I spent a while thinking it up. I’ve only actually tried one dog at a time. Let me know if you do try with two how it works. I’m sure you could keep them separated completely with stop-knots and shorter ropes, but that’d greatly decrease the area they can roam around.
@@thelifeofriley7668Basic Make that lower implements before getting out of operators seat -- (to much red or auto spell check) ---- 101 safety - here is my take ---- I was a manager in several nearby coal mines and also farmed - lowering all implements and attachments to the ground before leaving the operators seat is basic 101 safety - and taught at all operator training - a worker would be disciplined for leaving a bucket or blade etc of the ground and leaving the operators seat. Just think in your case - leave an implement above the ground and young children happen along start playing around the machine - the potential is for one to pull the lever while another is under a raised implement --- even adults fiddling with levers can pin themselves or others etc ---- Or highly likely in your case you bump or catch a lever in your clothing getting on and off the machine. and bingo! ---- Phew long winded but safety is important!
The traps are great. They trapped a lot of bugs and I had noticeably fewer mosquitos last year. The fans aren't bothersome at all. I don't hear the small ones outside. The largest one can be heard if you're near it, but I don't go near it often. Hope this helps.
We have started using our 9kg bottles on our instant hot water and for the last 3 months it's hit cold cold cold hot. Read in forums today the gas freezes because it can't handle the high flow rate. We t outside and sure enough the copper line was cold asf..wet a rag under Tao and draped it over line. Instant hit water. Just wanted to share incase someone having this issue.
Nice! Yep, my understanding is the conversion of propane liquid to gas is an endothermic reaction and requires a large amount of energy from its surroundings, such as from the tank or lines. The water has enough thermal mass for this reaction so the flow rate doesn’t slow.
There are two ropes. One rope is on the ground. The second rope is attached to the dog's collar on one end and attached to the ground rope on the other end. Hope that helps.
Looks great! We're looking to rebuild a similar walkway over 90' on dry to muddy duff depending on the weather and over a stream in wetland that was previously built with 10x6x6 directly on the ground with 34" cross boards. There has been too much shifting and sinking with this design and we are looking for solutions. What are your results after 3 years? Have your logs sunk disturbing the level? Do you get frost heave in your area? Does your area flood causing it to wash away? If so, did you find solutions or create another walkway? (link to another video?)
Thanks! We visited the site recently and were surprised and amused that this bridge has held up so well after all this time. It was just made from scrap and the logs aren’t anchored in the ground at all. The water flow doesn’t seem to bother it because there’s so much space between the support logs. It’s still right where we put it, just looks a little dirtier.
Thanks for the informative. I've only removed and reinstalled my backhoe once. But you're calm demeanor makes me feel that I'll get better with time. I think I'll take your suggestion and buy on off the self. Thanks again.
Garage door clearance is low so I store it with ROP down. I usually put ROP up if it’s risky but that farm was on perfectly flat ground. You’re right though, ROP should always be up.
www.manfrotto.com/us-en/x-pro-3-way-tripod-head-with-retractable-levers-mhxpro-3w/ I bought mine used but I think this is the tripod head I’m using here, at least it looks like it. Just make sure your head has uses the RC2 adapter. You may have to contact them to confirm.
I used a three inch ABS pipe for the bucket, cut a slot with a jigsaw and pry it onto the cutting edge. After a while when you see that its getting wore out you can flip it over.
This is pretty brilliant! So, a year later, how useful has this really been? Did it hold up well? Would you do anything different in its construction now that you've used it a while? Very good video!
Sorry, just seeing your comment. It has held up, although it spends most of it's life just sitting in the woods. I don't use it often, but when I do it's pretty handy. I put a lot of thought into it before I made it, not sure I would do things differently if I did it again. It hasn't been a problem, but ideally the chains should've been positioned lower.
I’ve used this exact setup twice now and the wear on the siding is minimal and excellent results while plowing. I have about 150’ of concrete driveway plus at least that much of asphalt street I clear for the neighborhood. I expect the first blade to last at least all winter (reversing it each use) and I still have the other half of the original siding board (48” bucket). Great idea!
Still using the original edge, haven’t needed to even reverse it yet. I like it when these simple solutions work so well. That being said, I’m using a rear 3pt wood max snowblower now, which does work even better for my drive.
I just use the leaf blower, trying to get all the debris off the radiator is a chore without a leaf blower. Takes a lot less time. With my lawn I don't have an issue with stuff getting all over the screens. I mow a pasture for a lady that clogs stuff up, I use the leaf blower when I'm done, occasionally I have to blow the stuff out about 1/2 way through mowing....but the rest blows off the tractor on the way home as it sits on the trailer and the wind from going down the road helps a lot to get everything cleared off the rest of the way so I don't drag any of the crap out of that pasture back home.
I used to use the leaf blower but then switched to the vacuum. Leaf blower with all of those dandelion seeds just made a mess, I probably seeded my entire lawn by doing this.
I'm going to guess that you need new batteries. Everybody says electric is zero maintenance, but they never consider battery care and they kill their batteries in one season. I have the Greenworks lineup and have kept the same batteries for 3 years now and they work great
Nice looking rows. What were the measurements of each row and the gap between each row? I think I am going to get this garden bedder. It look heavy and does a good job on building rows.
I’ll go out and measure later. I set it up based on my tractor’s wheel spacing. So each valley-valley width is just the width of the tractor (wheel - wheel). I know each row is 100ft long.
It actually lasted through the winter no problem. I have a 3 point blower for this year and I’ll make a video on that later. I don’t think the loader/box blade setup was ideal. It just made piles and I end up running out of space to push snow.
Thanks for the quick reply. I was looking at putting the pvc on my back blade. I have a front snow blower with a steel edge that I think needs some attention. I just got a new driveway this fall. @@thelifeofriley7668