Welcome Back, Neline! Barley is looking great! Always like seeing the whole group working together to get the crop in the bunks.Dennis always looks like he's having fun... Even when he's probably not. 😆
Mrs. Neline, I see you've become much more adept at editing your videos. Great to have you back and the video's musical frivolity was great to help us understand the 'spirit' of the hectic pace of work y'all'r gettin' done; "mak'in hay while the sun shines".
Great video, hitting a skunk would not have been fun... I am so happy for your family that the weather has blessed you with these incredible crops to sustain your farm ❤
Wow looking in the background of some of them shots and that hay field....wow if all those were cut on that field it looks like a lot. Glad to see your back on an believe me we appreciate you taking time to get us some footage and we do understand your busy. Take care and Tractor On !!!
Love your videos! Love Jan’s as well but he’s not pumping them out like you lately. Also someone has to tell him you load straight trucks back to front but tractor trailers front to back to keep weight on drive axels
September highs average in the high 60s, and lows average in the low 40s. They can even have below freezing temperatures overnight in September, but it typically doesn't happen until October.
@@markweiler8172 do farms not have water? Ignorance what it is, it appears they don't have systems in place to water anything. regardless, if they did would that yield additional time to harvest? That brings up the question, would investment in watering systems help yield enough to make the investment worth while?
@@markweiler8172 could that be part of the answer to my question? “Nope, we don’t have access to that quantity of water” “it’s too expensive” or “water needs to be in the plant and it wouldn’t absorb fast enough” I’m not a farmer just really curious about it. I thought it was a simple question… didn’t mean to ruffle feathers by not being specific