Ralph, great photo of your 40 in the field--what an iconic scene.
Gene, Tracy has been working in the garden here and that scene with the black plastic looks mighty familiar to me. She'll work on it some more this afternoon--even has some blue potatoes to plant.
I've been cleaning up the orchard--there were several good-sized apple trees that hadn't been tended in many years and were all overgrown with weed trees and briars and honeysuckle, and a few of the apple trees had split down low and halfway fallen over. At the far end of the orchard there was a long-buried junkpile with a young walnut tree growing out of one end of it. A few long days with the chainsaw, the little Kubota with loader, and a bonfire, and the place is looking much better. The apple trees are mostly cleaned up although I still need to finish up the two trees that had split. The junkpile is gone and I think I managed to save the walnut tree. This morning, after I'd hauled the last of the assorted non-burnable junk out of the pile and set the last soggy wooden scraps on the remains of the bonfire, I needed the 620 and rear blade to smooth out the dirt where the junkpile had been. I suppose back-blading with the Kubota bucket would have gotten the job done also, although more slowly and not as much fun.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]870[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=CONFIG]871[/ATTACH]
By way of comparison, this video from July of last year shows my first passes with the brushhog counter-clockwise around the same row of apple trees shown in the first photo above.
[video]https://youtu.be/uV3JIfSzSPk[/video]
Dean