The Panama Canal episode was fantastic. Also I would highly recommend Silcon Valley if you did not watch that one. It tells the history of Silcon Valley and the start up of Intel.Can't match all the production - but if you want to call education of a sort being productive - my wife and I are watching the documentaries of Ken Burns, more or less in order. Started with Brooklyn Bridge, and recently made it to "The War" (WWII). Every one was absolutely fascinating, many only 2 episodes long. Learned things I didn't know from every one of them. A whole bunch more to go.
I personally started reading mysteries (again) a while back and recently did the Peter Wimsey stories, just finishing up the last 2 (the last 4 in the collection were not written by the original author but are considered more or less canonical, apparently). Moving on to a few "suggested" novels next.
And my wife and I are mostly staying home, but continue to do selected Monday night concerts (tribute shows) at our local melodrama theatre (George Straight tribute next week) and an occasional movie. Plus Aqua Zumba 3 mornings a
Being a lefty, I hate the evil 7 pin. I do beat my weight playing golf.Hopefully candle pin
Not entirely true. We’re going on vacation Saturday. Been “retired” since 2019.Yep and nothing to look forward to. No days off, no vacations, no weekends. Sound terrible to me. But I'll probably have to retire someday, unless I can die before then.
Did a little bit of that when I was young, way too old for that now.Not yet retired. Spending the summer taking care of cattle, which I love; growing grass for hay; and baling hay, which is agony (old baler).
I don't have to bale the hay, but about once a month, I go to my hay guy, he loads some small bales (35) into my pickup and I bring them to the farm. Even though my wife does most of the stacking, it's getting tougher and tougher to unload them, especially during these warm weather days in NC.Not yet retired. Spending the summer taking care of cattle, which I love; growing grass for hay; and baling hay, which is agony (old baler).
Amen to things getting harder and harder. Your wife is awesome. The hay guy probably has mechanized bale pickup with bundler and forklift, pallets, ect to stack the bales. Your way is harder. Have horses?I don't have to bale the hay, but about once a month, I go to my hay guy, he loads some small bales (35) into my pickup and I bring them to the farm. Even though my wife does most of the stacking, it's getting tougher and tougher to unload them, especially during these warm weather days in NC.
Can't imagine how my hay guy cuts, bales and stores thousands of bales twice, sometimes three times, year in and year out.
Catching a trout is an optional bonus.A rod a reel, a drift boat and trout is as productive as I get.
I grew up on a small dairy farm. We loaded loose hay with hay forks on a hay wagon. A PITA but lots of fun jumping from the rafters in the hayloft. By the time we got a shared baler I had decided that dairy farming was not for me.Not yet retired. Spending the summer taking care of cattle, which I love; growing grass for hay; and baling hay, which is agony (old baler).
He has manual helpers to load the hay onto a loooong trailer and manually unload and stack into his hay barns.Amen to things getting harder and harder. Your wife is awesome. The hay guy probably has mechanized bale pickup with bundler and forklift, pallets, ect to stack the bales. Your way is harder. Have horses?
In the early 60’s I stood on a sled behind the bailer and stacked them pyramid style 7 high. When done I grabbed the straight crowbar and jammed it through the slot into the ground and held it in place to move the stack off the sled. Rinse and repeat from 7am to 2 pm. .50$ an hourDid a little bit of that when I was young, way too old for that now.
Couldn't agree more @vtcwbuff .Catching a trout is an optional bonus.
I would hope so.I had heart surgery on Monday. Does that qualify as "productive"?
Oh, I hope it went okay.I had heart surgery on Monday. Does that qualify as "productive"?
We have a neighbor with large draft horses, he hays 2-3 times yearly, and he gets other neighbors to help (I help too). I hate it but he’s our neighbor, and I feel pressured to help- he’ll call & say “I’m haying the south field tomorrow”, for example. It’s always on a hot day, it’s kind of dangerous, and it’s a couple of hundred bales each time. One day someone’s going to fall off the upper hayloft floor- hope it isn’t me.I don't have to bale the hay, but about once a month, I go to my hay guy, he loads some small bales (35) into my pickup and I bring them to the farm. Even though my wife does most of the stacking, it's getting tougher and tougher to unload them, especially during these warm weather days in NC.
Can't imagine how my hay guy cuts, bales and stores thousands of bales twice, sometimes three times, year in and year out.
Well, I'm able to tell you about it, so it was at least marginally successful. Time will tell how successful...thanks for asking.Oh, I hope it went okay.
Only if successful, and the fact that you're posting this suggests that it is. Unless someone has a Ouija board with an Internet connection!I had heart surgery on Monday. Does that qualify as "productive"?
Interesting how this one comment generated so many replies related to putting in hay....Not yet retired. Spending the summer taking care of cattle, which I love; growing grass for hay; and baling hay, which is agony (old baler).
Just upholding the legend of the Simpering Eunuchs!You do that every week!
I took it as an indication of how many BYers still live in and around Connecticut.Interesting how this one comment generated so many replies related to putting in hay....