19richie66 17,746 #8951 Posted Tuesday at 09:59 PM 1 hour ago, JPWH said: Took a short walk on the beach the last three days. We will be here till Thursday. Our annual anniversary trip that we have missed for the last four years. Happy Anniversary! 1 1 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rjg854 12,428 #8952 Posted Tuesday at 10:02 PM 1 hour ago, JPWH said: Took a short walk on the beach Happy to see you were able to do this again ❤️❤️ Happy Anniversary 🎉 1 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ed Kennell 42,771 #8953 Posted Wednesday at 07:56 PM Picked up a cheap seat at the auction. Finished wrapping the venison. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wayne0 1,326 #8954 Posted Wednesday at 08:51 PM 53 minutes ago, Ed Kennell said: Picked up a cheap seat at the auction. Finished wrapping the venison. No vacuum pack? I guess it doesn't matter if you're not keeping it for a year. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ed Kennell 42,771 #8955 Posted Wednesday at 09:01 PM 6 minutes ago, Wayne0 said: No vacuum pack? I used to vac pac, but I find an air tight plastic wrap then butcher paper lasts longer and prevents freezer burn. 2 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ed Kennell 42,771 #8956 Posted Thursday at 03:40 PM 18 hours ago, Wayne0 said: No vacuum pack? Some more detail on how I process venison and fish for freezing. I cut the deer steak, backstraps, and tenderloins in strips and by rolling in plastic wrap I get an air tight seal with out using the vac packer. You can see the shape in the pic. For the ground venison that I add 20% bacon, I do vac pack in one pound packages. I press them flat and square and use the back of a knife to make a + mark that gives me four 1/4 pound burgers. The ground meat has air that has to pulled out with the vac packer. I also vac pac fish and wrap everything in butcher paper to prevent the freezer burn and it is easier to mark and date. 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ClassicTractorProfessor 5,416 #8957 Posted Friday at 09:00 PM We’ve had this full bumper replacement for an 88-98 Chevy sitting out in the weeds behind the tire barn at work for years. Brand new leftover from when we were a Ranch Hand dealer back before I even came to work here, and that’s been just shy of 8 years. Asked the boss a couple months ago what he wanted for it and he told me to just take it he was tired of mowing around it. Had a slow day so I rounded up some help from the young stout kid I work with and we pulled off the old grille guard and bumper and put the replacement on the old 1992 K2500 feed truck. Made a huge difference in the looks of the old truck, will look even better after I get around to putting the new tires and wheels I’ve got for it on. 3 3 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sparky-(Admin) 23,675 #8958 Posted Saturday at 11:07 PM Just over 28 years ago I was on this house (my brand new house) nailing on the 3 tab shingles myself with help from a buddy that was good at roofing. Today I watched a crew strip it and re-roof it. Quite a bit of compromised sheathing unfortunatly. Done one day before a massive storm (rain & wind) will hit us. 4 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
c-series don 10,405 #8959 Posted yesterday at 12:15 AM @Sparky Funny you bring this up Mike, because 29 years ago me and a friend roofed my house. I just started getting quotes on stripping off the original roof and putting a new one on. There’s no way I would attempt that now even if I had plenty of help. 2 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Sparky-(Admin) 23,675 #8960 Posted yesterday at 12:35 AM 18 minutes ago, c-series don said: @Sparky Funny you bring this up Mike, because 29 years ago me and a friend roofed my house. I just started getting quotes on stripping off the original roof and putting a new one on. There’s no way I would attempt that now even if I had plenty of help. LOL! At 31 years old I was much better suited to be on the roof for days hand nailing shingles, those days are behind me. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wallfish 18,554 #8961 Posted 23 hours ago Yup, same here. Me and my son in law did our roof back in 09/10 with just the 2 of us. No way I could physically pull that off now. I'm sure glad we did the 50 year shingles. 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebinmaine 74,099 #8962 Posted 16 hours ago No shingles will ever be installed here. Metal roof. The BBT and I like the look and the snow slides right off. Metal is LOUD if the base layer isn't right. Rain storms are a wicked cacophony. When we had the house done we left the asphalt shingles in place. Thats the noise reduction layer. This roof should outlast me easily & we don't need to keep it shoveled. 3 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ebinmaine 74,099 #8963 Posted 15 hours ago Trina's family has a look looonnngg standing tradition of Goin' apple pickin' 🍎 every year... for DECADES. They figure they haven't missed one in at least 30 years. Even then it was because some folks were 1000 miles away but some folks still went... My own past was also into the tradition but not quite so often or steadily. Well this year the grand baby is 16 months old and starting to walk/run explore. Most apple farms in this area have the standards in place. Apples in trees. Apples on the ground. Apples in bags for sale. U-pick. They pick. Whatever. Then some attractions like a playground and/or old machines to stare at. Cute little farm stand or store with various apple or other products for sale along with an assortment of ... various variables. Trina's daughter wanted to try a more "retail" farm with lotsa stuff to do. Ricker Hill Farm is all that & then some. The place is it's own destination. All of the above and on the grand scale. They even run a literal tractor & hay wagon commuting service for the whole day. Yesterday we happened to be there during a Craft Fair as well. All local. All home made items. This is Jaxon eating an apple his way. 1. Peel with teeth. 2. Discard peel. 3. Eat the nummy section below ridiculous annoying peel. This is how we hunker down below a tree and really set to munchin' Don't mess with him in this mode. We tried to get the kid to make a funny face but only the Bear succeeded. This bouncy house obstacle course was HUGE. Trina - being an average 5 year old - had to go through it. So she took the kid. These red standing pieces would bend towards you and knock you sideways. Jaxon kept going near, getting knocked over, and laughing really hard. Repeatedly. So eventually Trina stuffed him through. Here's the hay wagon ride settin with "Pappy Bear" nice n comfy after a busy few hours... 1 2 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites