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Peasgood

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Everything posted by Peasgood

  1. ps. the "box of plasters" part of my answer still stands.
  2. Gomtaro are good saws there is no doubt about that. As a first saw they are a little cheaper than others and by time you have worn it out you will know what to replace it with and why, be that a different model or the same again. The question I answered was "which first saw", not "which Silky do you like best".
  3. Gomtaro and a box of plasters.
  4. Giant clam
  5. Kurtail is the same stuff as Harvest. I t certainly knocks it about but it kills everything else as well, including your grass paddock. If that is what you want, I advise using Weedazol. That gets it very well.
  6. If my dog doesn't get you, I will. You better hope it is the dog!
  7. Measured them using the right angle triangle method, they are more like 80' tall according to that.
  8. So how much further apart than usual are they?
  9. An old boy told me that if the Oak hangs onto it's leaves well into autumn we are in for a bad one. Worst winter I have ever known did indeed follow the oaks hanging onto their leaves until nearly Christmas. Unless you actually record the dates every year I really don't think you will remember properly. It might be that the Oak is pretty much the same date every year and it is the Ash that changes. My apples break buds almost exactly the same date every year (14th March) I know this because the first scab spray has to go on then and spray records show this. Last year it was a full month later! This year back to the 14th March.
  10. My theory on this is that the trees have no way of predicting future rainfall, all they can do is react to the weather we have already had. In my experience (I am outdoors all day every day and my job depends entirely on the weather) the rainfall evens itself out over time. So if it has been particularly wet for a long period we are very likely to go into a prolonged dry spell, and vice versa. So if anything can be deduced it is that a prolonged wet period can make Ash slow to come into leaf and Oak tends to be less affected. Dry periods can make Ash come into leaf earlier. I have a sneaky feeling Oak isn't the one that varies much. A lot of farmers all over the country are saying they are short of rain. Chucked it down all day here! Ash are late but I wouldn't say I've not known it before.
  11. That's exactly why he put it there.
  12. Very hard to get 4x4 tyres with weight rating on them. Have been told that the LSD diff out of a Terrano will go in a Cabstar axle. That would help.
  13. Sorry for your loss Eggs and Bobh. RIP
  14. I remember once going out with a mates dad in a transit pickup to collect some hay. The hay barn was in a particularly swampy part of the county and did appear to have a moat around it. I'll never forget him saying "If we go hard enough do ye reckon we'll make it" :lol: Needless to say we didn't and were stuck in the swamp for an hour or two!
  15. I have run Cabstars for nearly 30 years and love them to bits. They get stuck on damp concrete!
  16. I think he said magnets.
  17. They would be sent on their way with a flea in their ear if they turned up at my place at gone midnight. Idiots!
  18. My potatoes are just coming into flower. (fingers crossed no frost now) I've got about 30 acres of cabbages amongst lots of other stuff too.
  19. Weedazol does a lot better.
  20. A friend of mine lives by the railway line in Chester. When at their house I often see long freight trains loaded with what looks like brash. Probably where that is going. I was going to measure the height but didn't get chance today. I remember felling some and pacing them out to be 90feet, that was 10 years ago, maybe a bit more.
  21. Thanks for the replies. This is more for within a few years rather than immediately, will look into it a bit more when the time comes. Worse case scenario sounds like I might get it chipped and removed for free. In the particular circumstances that wouldn't be an entirely bad thing. (of course payment would be better)
  22. Thanks. First time I remember driving that tractor on my own was 44 years ago, I was 6 and helping my Dad carting cauliflowers. Back on topic, the bees have found their nest in the elevator tubing again.
  23. Thinking out loud here a bit. I have a few hundred leylandii to cut down and trying to make a business plan out of the job. They are hedgeline grown and are about 100' tall on average. The wood can be sold as logs (might even try milling some) but can the chip be sold too? I know it sounds mad but no harm in asking, the alternative is to put a match to it unchipped. Question is, is there a market for a large volume of leylandii chip?

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