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Western Ohio Update

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Western Ohio Update
« Reply #660 on: March 31, 2014, 10:31:55 AM »
Well we have broken low temperature records in parts of Sask. this morning of March 31. About -5F when I first looked. Guess the bare ground will be frozen solid as ever and the snow will remain in the same banks it has been since November. On the positive side,,, no new snow.
Ralph in Sask.

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #661 on: March 31, 2014, 03:43:38 PM »
We started today off with +15, Ralph.  20 degrees warmer than you but still cold for this time of year.  Out new snowfall is going down with + 45 and full sun at mid afternoon.  I sat on the front steps for a few minutes (south side) with the sun on my back and it  felt as warm as indoors.  Very nice.

Charlie

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #662 on: April 01, 2014, 01:20:11 PM »
In Ohio, March went out like a lamb. Temperature at 62 degrees, clear blue sky and mild winds. Srarting to get some nice drying. Able to get the tractor and trailer into the woods and have hauled out 2 loads of nice ash firewood. Putting the second load in the woodshed trailer. Good wood and seasoned. Plan to take the saws to the back end of the woods and block up 2 large oak limbs. Will have to wait for more drying to haul this out.

Amish neighbors are plowing. Ground across the road is different than my side of the road. Lots of muck ground there.

Windy and warm today with 63 at 1:15 and wind gusts to 44 MPH. Good day for drying.

Gene

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« Reply #663 on: April 03, 2014, 02:09:57 PM »
Little more snow fell last night. Sun came out for a while this morning and it was pretty warm, somewhere in the 30s. Opened up the shed and let the sun shine in while I took this pic of myself wearing one of my vintage hats in front of the even more vintage Cockshutt 40. Now back to work on the Massey.
Ralph in Sask.

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #664 on: April 09, 2014, 04:42:21 PM »
Ralph, sure glad to see you are getting some spring weather. Here in Ohio we are having nice spring days after some heavy weekend rain. Lots of water still ponding in fields.

Going to see if I can send you [ATTACH=CONFIG]714[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]715[/ATTACH]some green pictures.

Gene

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« Reply #665 on: April 09, 2014, 10:25:50 PM »
Gene, been a while since I saw any green grass like in your pictures. I don't have any here yet but the snow is really melting the past few days. Up to about 50 degrees. Getting some mud and water around. I got stuck for a bit with the old 40 moving a bale feeder this afternoon.
Ralph in Sask.

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #666 on: April 10, 2014, 10:06:32 PM »
Great pictures, gentlemen!   And man, that weather is fine today.  72 F or so, windy earlier today but not bad this evening.   I'm going to post this to the tractor list also, but am not sure it's working lately so will offer it here as well.   Been a while since I was inspired to write much, but sometimes things just fall into place.

I'm preparing to move my 53 Super M from its and my suburban home to our long-awaited little old farm in the country, and the onset of warm weather makes me think I'll simply drive it the 35 miles rather than arrange to have it hauled.   This evening's chore was to take it down to the corner gas station and fill the tank, and then change the oil once back home, and 70+ degree temperatures and warm evening sunlight made it seem like a simple task.

First discovery was that my battery was dead, again, somewhat to my surprise since I had removed it from the tractor and fully charged it not that long ago.  Okay, it was probably six months ago, but in my mind it was very recent.   So I threw the charger back on it for a while and attended to some household chores, but as sunset approached I thought I'd best get on my way so I took the charger off, flipped the seat base back down over the battery and bolted it tight, and cranked the engine over.  Fired right up like the fine old girl she is, and I chugged my way down to the station.

Chugged being the right word, too, since last year's remnant of gasoline was looking rather orange in the sediment bowl and seemed to cause the engine to be undecided about what RPM it ought to be running at, or possibly whether it ought to be running at all.   In hindsight, I notice my factory-sealed little bottle of StaBil sitting right there near the battery charger where I set it not that long ago, intending to put it in the tank before winter.  Okay, it was six months ago, but in my mind it was very recent.  

$63.00 worth of fresh gasoline later, I climbed back up, listened to that familiar rhythm of clank-rattle-rattle-squeak-click-scratch (clutch in, make sure gear shift's in neutral, little tug on throttle, pull out ignition switch, pull back starter rod).   As always, that part sounded great.    But the following "click-click-silence" wasn't so endearing a tune.   #@*$! that battery.

Now, I refer to this place as the "corner gas station," since it is in fact a gas station and on a corner, and I like it because one of the roads that forms the corner is a quiet neighborhood street that links up to some other quiet neighborhood streets, one of which eventually links up with my driveway.  Trouble is, the other road on the corner is a six-lane divided artery two-tenths of a mile from the interstate off-ramp and one-tenth in the other direction from a traffic light at the entrance to the mall, and it turns out I wasn't the only one who'd thought to stop at the gas station this evening.   I was the only one with an old farm tractor, to be sure, but the fact that it was dead silent and blocking one of the service aisles at the station detracted somewhat from whatever cachet I imagined I'd had up to that point.

So I left it in neutral, climbed back off, and proceeded to roll it out of the way.   For a 6000-pound machine, it rolls pretty easily on nice smooth level asphalt, which would have come in right handy if the gas station parking lot had had very much of that.  As it was, I was working up a sweat leaning into one of the rear wheels and inching my way along over potholes and patches, when a young man pulled up in the next aisle and came over to ask if I needed jumper cables.    I thanked him and said yes, that would be terrific, since my alternate plan was to inch my way the remaining two hundred yards or so to where I hoped the road sloped down steeply enough and for far enough that I could roll-start the tractor.   So he hopped back in his SUV, pulled around and parked nose-to-nose with the tractor, and got out with his jumper cables.   Then after I showed him that the battery was actually under the operator's seat at the back of the tractor, he patiently drove back around to the back.

By then I'd climbed up to open the toolbox to get the big crescent wrench to loosen the battery-cover bolts, only to be greeted by its distinct absence along with a crystal-clear mental image of it sitting on the bench in my garage where I'd set it about 12 minutes earlier after tightening hell out of those bolts.   Evan (as the young man was named, I later learned), turned out to be more patient and helpful than I could have hoped for and offered to drive me home to get the wrench.   So we made a quick round trip, opened up the battery box, and hooked up the cables.   I realized I'd have to break my rule about never starting the tractor unless I'm in the seat with the clutch in, since the seat was flipped back over and the jumper-cabled-battery didn't seem too appealing an alternative.  So after making sure it was in neutral with the brakes set I settled for the squeak-click-scratch of throttle/ignition/starter rod, and the Super M fired right up like the fine old girl she is.

Evan said his goodbyes as I said my latest round of thank-yous, and then I bolted the seat base/battery cover back down, carefully put the wrench in the tool box, hopped up on the seat, switched the lights onto Low, released the brakes, and hummed off into the darkness.   Hummed being the right word, too, since that new yellow gasoline flushed the sediment bowl and flowed on down to the carburetor and made it nice and easy for the engine to know right what RPM it ought to be running at.
« Last Edit: April 10, 2014, 10:20:56 PM by vinsond »

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Western Ohio Update
« Reply #667 on: April 11, 2014, 10:10:23 AM »
Dean, that is an interesting account of your adventure with the Farmall. I would not want to push a tractor that heavy even on a hard surface. My back aches just thinking about it. Lucky for you a helpful stranger stopped to give you assistance getting it running. Should be a nice drive at those temperatures. It would make a good youtube movie, a few video clips of the more interesting parts of the journey. The exercise will be good for the tractor too.
Ralph in Sask.

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #668 on: April 13, 2014, 11:34:48 AM »
Thanks, Ralph--and good suggestion about the video clips.  I'll see what I can do.

Dean

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« Reply #669 on: April 14, 2014, 11:06:48 AM »
Quote from: vinsond;2291
Thanks, Ralph--and good suggestion about the video clips.  I'll see what I can do.

Dean

It will be fun to look back on in years to come I am sure. I wish I had video of some of the drives I have done in the past 40 or so years. I don't want to repeat the drives but it would be good to look back on.
We set new low temperature records here overnight. Still some of the old snowbanks left and a little new snow falls overnight. Melts pretty quick.
Ralph in Sask.

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #670 on: April 14, 2014, 02:42:36 PM »
I looked at our thermometer yesterday afternoon and saw strange numbers which I found hard to understand.  First was an 8, then a 3,then a decimal point, then a 4.  Let me see ----- --- --eighty         three     point       four.   What world did I wake up in today.   No sunshine either.  Had to start the old cub and drive it 300 feet down the road to splash some gear oil up into it's gizzard bearings.  Ground is too wet to drive it anywhere except the road.  I did make it out back with the utility golf cart to get rid of a load of tree branches.  Had to stay to the high spots.  Great to have a couple of warm days, even if warm is not yet here to stay.

Charlie V




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« Last Edit: April 14, 2014, 05:24:05 PM by Charlie V »

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #671 on: April 14, 2014, 10:51:40 PM »
Hi Charlie.  Right about 80 degrees in Ohio yesterday too, and like you I thought it was a good day for a tractor drive.  I took Ralph's suggestion and took some video as I drove the Super M to my new place.   Kind of bouncy and the wind noise is pretty aggravating to listen to (I'm no Roosty 6, obviously), but it was fun.

Dean

[video=youtube;ny1KSNGj5w4]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ny1KSNGj5w4[/video]

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #672 on: April 15, 2014, 10:00:45 AM »
Great job with the video, Dean.  The SM seemed to be enjoying itself too.  Very nice machine.  

Sad to say we joined the league of cold, rainy, and wet today.

Charlie

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« Reply #673 on: April 15, 2014, 11:25:15 AM »
Dean, great work on the video. I can see you went to some effort in setting up and editing and it shows in the results. Your camera mount worked well too. The sound of the engine came through well and there was enough interesting scenery along the roadside that I was never tempted to hit the fast forward tab.
Snowing here and 20 degrees this morning. Not open tractor weather but I guess the cattle are looking for a bale of hay and I will fire up the old 40 to carry one out.
Ralph in Sask.

Western Ohio Update
« Reply #674 on: April 15, 2014, 03:20:22 PM »
What a chance in weather here in Ohio. Had 76 degrees on Sunday and high today of 29 degrees and about 1.5 inches of snow overnight. Ralph and Charlie are both warmer than we are in Ohio. More rain before the snow, so now have more water ponding in the lawn and fields. Gonna take a while for it to dry.

Dean picked a good day on Sunday to move the Super M. Made and posted a nice video too. Thanks Dean.

Have had a lot of damage from ants in the lawn. Don't know how the little critters can move so much dirt and make the lawn so rough. Decided this morning to do something about them. Went to seed store and got 50 pounds of Pilot, which is generic Lorsban. I have a small broadcaster I mount on my John Deere lawn mower to spread the chemical. The chemical requires water to activate it, and I figured the snow would be a good source of water. Also made it easy to follow my tracks to see where I needed to broadcast. Now when the snow melts it will activate the chemical and move it into the soil where the ants live. Hope it works. Was a cold  job, even with heavy coveralls and insulated gloves. Wind about 20 MPH.

Gene