Baymule
Herd Master
Day 1. Sunshine. Still mud and slop, but sunshine. Got to go rob cow panels from sheep pens. Then replace with a length of sheep and goat wire. Have to move sheep.
Still no dirt.
Still no dirt.
Working in slop makes a job so much more fun...Day 1. Sunshine. Still mud and slop, but sunshine. Got to go rob cow panels from sheep pens. Then replace with a length of sheep and goat wire. Have to move sheep.
Still no dirt.
I laughed at your comments, not your progress.I’ve been outside destroying previous efforts. Going rather well if I do say so myself. I came in to blow my nose, cool to cold wind drags drippy snot out of my head like a gold miner striking the mother lode. When I can no longer snuff it back up in my head and my throat is dry from breathing through my mouth, I come in, blow my nose and get a drink of water.
1. Stretch of pen wall
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This was put together with whatever I had on hand, including 2 clamps courtesy of @Ridgetop’s DH. He gave me 2 bags of these lovely marvelous things. I keep a weather wrench permanently loaded with a 5/8” socket just so I don’t have to go hunt one up. Why I used only 2 of these is beyond me. Just try to explain my thought process, he// I can’t.
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2. Dragging panels over the driveway fence.
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3. My efforts have rewarded me with 1 cow panel. 2 hog panels, 1/2 of a hog panel,
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4. I took down the gate, a piece of horse panel that has been a pain in the north bound backside of a southbound Baymule.
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5. Assorted fasteners and the motley assortment of tools required to remove them.
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6. All clear now. With DEstruction , next comes REstruction. I measured the span, its 31 feet. Measure 31, cut 32 because I have an extraordinary ability to screw things up.
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Break is over, I can breathe now.
I enjoy seeing how you workaround difficulties.I went back outside. I got a partial roll off the pile and rolled it out.
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I laid the measuring tape down and cut it with long handled bolt cutters. I love my bolt cutters. No puny little wire cutters for me! No struggling to cut the wire, no sore hands from squeezing as hard as I can, nope. Bolt cutters are freakin awesome!
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I rolled it up, tied with hay string and carried it to the sheep pen. I wrapped the end around the T-post on the end and wired it in place. I pulled it to the gate opening, stood the wire up and it was sagging. Hmmmm……. I have a come along, but didn’t want to go through all that rigamarole to get it out, hook it up, blah, blah, blah. I wove a rusty piece of pipe through the wire, looped some hay string around the trailer hitch on the mule and tied the ends to the rusty pipe. I eased the mule forward and broke the hay string. Backed up, tied a new knot in the darned hay string and tried again, reminding myself this ain’t a come along, it’s a sh!t tool for a craptastic job.
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I set the brake, cut the mule off and zip tied the wire to the T-posts. I decided it needed 2 more T-posts, went and got the driver and slammed them in the ground. I zip tied the wire to those. Looked pretty darn good. Then I retrieved the half hog panel, used zip tie loops for hinges and carabiners for latches.
The pen looks good and I got panels for the hoop coop.
Tim the dirt man texted and said he’d be here in 30-40 minutes! Whoop!!
I got dirt. I got a lot of dirt, 9 yards.
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Tomorrow I play in the dirt!
You want me to post pictures?YAY!!! Lumber and cow panels!! That’s the good stuff! Nice friend to haul that for you! We need pictures of this valuable haul!