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Billhook

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Everything posted by Billhook

  1. The rats had a good time chewing the wiring harness of my Ford 8210 at one end of the old grain store where I store branch loggings in plastic net sacks which they also make holes and nest in. I rigged up and old electric fencer to the Ford with the live to the Ford and I was wondering where to put the earth wire when I thought that the old metal dresser would be good. Turned it on and there was a loud squeal from the tractor and a rat jumped out and every time it hit the floor it squealed and jumped in the air. It was funny to watch and there was squealing throughout the store which had metal ducts. I suppose that the metal reinforcement in the concrete was also working and every time the first rat landed the current moved more easily through the rats body than through the concrete. The other thing that I realised was that the tractor tyres do not insulate electricity as there is a certain amount of metal in them which is why they catch fire if you happen to hit a high voltage line with your hedge trimmer! Have not seen a rat in that building since!
  2. Read this then had a google search and found this growing elm from seed ERAZ-CONFERENCE.COM Started reading it and thought that there must be something wrong here. Anyone know any more?
  3. It's all about the bass, no rammel. (Rammel being Lincolnshire slang for rubbish)
  4. A friend brought round a copy of the smaller pickaroon, which looked identical but was completely different in weight and balance and crucially kept dropping logs. The Stihl ones are hand forged and the steel seems special as I have never sharpened mine in three years. I only use the big one when the Teleporter is not at hand, but I use the smaller one all the time and thoroughly recommend it.
  5. Call me old fashioned, but my ancestors have been cooking on open flames for several million years. I expect your induction steaks to keep inducting once they are inside you and will eventually induct your brain and fry it!
  6. Left it about 18 months on the ground to start it spalting a bit. Then milled it and seasoned for about 2.5 years I think. Did two trees. Stayed pretty flat but at the widest the biggest was only just over two foot. Yes, patience Billhook, patience!
  7. How long did you have to season it for and was there much warping? Looks great by the way!
  8. My parents and the family have sat by a large open log fire all our lives. Wood stoves only relatively recently My parents both died in their nineties and it was not from pollution. My lifetime of diesel machinery, stubble burning, petrol fumes, welding fumes, other people's cigarette smoke, firework displays, chainsawing, milling, bonfires. motor racing/ go kart circuits , spray painting, working inside grain stores and bins with all the dust, all mean that I should have been dead years ago according to experts.
  9. When I first installed my North Sea gas cooker, I could not believe the speed and controllability. I spent ages over a saucepan of boiling milk just raising and lowering the bubbles by turning the control knob.(little things please little minds!) impossible with my previous cookers, both Aga and electric.
  10. Have you ever slabbed a large sycamore with your Lucas and was the result worth it? I have a four and a half foot wide trunk twelve feet long, nice and straight with no knots and was debating whether to try and make some natural edged tables from it to try out my new planer and sander on the Lucas Model 8 after slabbing it at three inches thick.
  11. Think you may be correct about the fact that it may be oak looking at the medullary rays, but above the log in the bottom picture it does look like Elm as there seem to be beetle tracks under the bark. I think that is what caused me to think that the whole load was Elm. I must pay more attention to logging the logs I cut for the log box!
  12. It’s ok, you are all wrong! I have just discovered what this grey bit of plastic is for, and it clasps it very firmly!
  13. New can arrived today with two spouts, one for the fuel and the other for the oil. Both are too thin to be held in place by the stupid grey thing, so I feel a bit less stupid now as I know I was never offered the auto stop now or about twenty years ago when I bought the first can!
  14. If you have enough bottle, you can get really canned!
  15. Looking at some mixed firewood logs today, I noticed that just the Elm logs have a greeny / blue ring of either fungus or lichen. Since the tree died with Dutch Elm disease, is this the fungus coming out that the beetle introduced?
  16. You are probably right, it is just that I thought I could see a crack developing in the left hand fork of the second photo and perhaps water will seep in over time. If I ever do brace it perhaps some of this cobra webbing would be a good idea Thank you for the advice about where to place the cables. 2 tonne / 4 Tonne Cobra Anti-abrasion Cover - Cobra Bracing - Arborist Equipment WWW.LANDMARKTRADING.COM This is placed as a covering sleeve over the rope to reduce risk of abrasion to the bark. Sold per metre. 4 Tonne.
  17. Nothing like a bit of click bait to gain your attention! I have a couple of weeping trees in my garden that I planted in 1996 . A weeping Beech and a weeping Lime. The first two are the Lime in Winter and the next two the Beech. Last one the Lime in Summer Picture of the Lime in full evening dress is beauty to behold. I once visited an old country house where they had a fully mature tree and they had put lights inside the canopy which was spectacular at night. The beech split down the middle about five years ago but seems to have strengthened itself around the scar The lime, which looks like a beautiful lady in a long dress in Summer, is now naked and I can see that it too might split down the fork Is it a good idea to somehow strap the two limbs to support them. If it is done with metal bands then I assume that it will cut into the tree in time and if done with leather or other materials it may rot. What do you suggest I do, if anything?
  18. Free delivery with my Amazon prime
  19. I see that the transparent one is still available on Amazob for about £42 with nozzles which is about the same price as the Husky one Stihl Genuine 0000 881 0123 Transparent Prf Combination Caniste: Amazon.co.uk: DIY & Tools WWW.AMAZON.CO.UK Stihl Genuine 0000 881 0123 Transparent Prf Combination Caniste: Amazon.co.uk: DIY & Tools Husqvarna Petrol and Oil Combination Combi Can 5 and 2.5 Litres: Amazon.co.uk: DIY & Tools WWW.AMAZON.CO.UK Free delivery and returns on all eligible orders. Shop Husqvarna Petrol and Oil Combination Combi Can 5 and 2.5 Litres.
  20. Moose, you make me feel very stupid! To be fair, I have never seen or been offered one of these spouts when buying the can. I have never had any trouble with putting two filler spouts which stay on the can similar to these both with screw caps, though I am sure they were nearer a fiver when I bought them. Universal Motorcycle Car Fuel Can Spout With Cap For 29 mm Standard Pump HDPE WWW.EBAY.CO.UK Made from HDPE and 130 mm long, this is ideal for storing in your luggage. Made from HDPE. With a 29 mm opening, this spout fit's a standard fuel can nozzle. 29 mm Fuel Can... It seems like a recipe for losing caps and spouts to have to remove them each time and a bore changing the spout over from oil to fuel.
  21. Tried to put this on “Faces in Trees” thread but it would not upload the picture. Probably censored!

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