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csservices

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Posts posted by csservices

  1. I was an early starter, my dad used to put a splash of whisky in our tea/coffee if we had been out working in the cold weather, but after an optics race while I was on YTS during which I consumed a very large amount of whitehorse and passed out on the sofa in the caravan on a night when it went down to -5 and woke up with no feeling below my neck I didnt touch the stuff for years :laugh1: but last year got presented by my mum with a load of bottles that I had been given as tips etc over the years that I'd left behind when I moved out, so I'm slowly getting back into it, treated myself to a bottle of Tullamore Dew at xmas, thats a nice smooth irish one, one I do like which isnt directly whisky is Innis & Gunn beer which is brewed in whisky barrels and is highly recommended :thumbup:

  2. Know what you mean,when i was growing up lots of blokes in my village had chainsaws,danarm,mc co,s,partner and no one used earmuffs,helmets,any kind of protection whatsoever,the saws didnt have chain breaks and i cant remember 1 accident.

     

    I got offered an old Danarm by the farmer I used to work for when I first started, said to me one day theres an old saw over there behind those hurdles if you want it, leant over to pick it up and nearly went head first over the hurdles due to the weight :laugh1: another farmer oncew offerd me and a mate a saw when we were at his place foxing, he dragged a big wooden case out of the shed, dont know what make it was but pretty sure it was a villiers or similar 4 stroke engine and you pulled a lever to turn the bar over so the engine stayed upright, was a two man job one each end, we passed on it needless to say :laugh1:

  3. Sunny and warming up here today, unfortunately that meant I found the coal man had slid his truck off the farm drive on my way out to deliver some hay this morning, pulled him out and damn me on way back in he'd got stuck again, good job the other tractor was the other side of him down the yard so I could pull him back again, then had to tow him all the way to the road :001_rolleyes::001_cool:

  4. I had one years ago, did the same thing would run fine through the first tank of fuel but once warm wouldnt restart until cold and it was like that from brand new, never had any other problems with it always cut fine and handled anything thrown at it was just the hot starting was a pain

  5. Just uploaded this one I took the other day, starting to give now but still having to walk down the drive to the yard as its like a bobsled run, ok in 4x4 but not risking it in the van, this pic is the field behind the yard while I was checking sheep, ditch is about 4ft deep and the hedge is about 3ft high on top of it to give you an idea :001_cool:

    003.jpg.e1698556a1ca9f305c5518e9d5225986.jpg

  6. Few years back I ended up with the job of tidying up the gardens on a big old georgian house, gardens ran to about 4 acres, was the clients father who lived there with his house keeper, he was in his late eighties and the gardens had'nt been touched in years apart from mowing the lawns, there was some ivy on one of the out buildings growing up the roof that they wanted cleared, that had about 6 inch trunk, unfortunately once I cut through it realised the ivy was holding the roof in place! that called for some very hasty emergency propping against the wall plate and had to leave the rest of the ivy in place :001_cool:

  7. 4-6 ft drifts today, had to leave van at end of farm drive and walk to the yard through them, digger man came and cleared the drive and 2-3hrs later was just as bad again, can't even do owt in the workshop as everythings under a foot to eighteen inches of snow where its blown in under the eaves :sneaky2:

  8. Some interesting points being made, thing is, you don't need a course to teach you to id trees or fungi, you can read a book, difference is if you do the course you can show a box ticker a piece of paper that says you attended a course, but unless you see them at different times of year in different weather different seasons etc you won't always be sure and thats where experience comes in, same with cutting trees, no two are the same you need the experienc eto read the tree, to know which way it to fell it safely etc, I know my experience is mostly in hedge laying, but I could'nt stand in front of hedge and say to someone else, cut that out, lay that etc, I have to be doing it, its very hard to explain 22 years of experience in all types of hedges to someone else its a job you have to learn yourself and I guess its the same with trees, you can learn the basics on a course but until you do it and learn what works and what doesnt you won't know, because you cant always have someone following you round telling you how to do the job, two things I always remember being told, 1) The man who says he knows everything knows nothing, and 2) if you don't learn something everyday your doing something wrong :001_cool:

  9. Thirded, but you have a 357, so isn't that good enough? send it spud for some special treatment!

     

     

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    Much as I like it, it is heavy for when picking it up and putting it down all day when hedgelaying, I must be getting old :001_cool:

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