Posted by JDseller on December 07, 2010 at 20:10:25 from (208.126.196.144):
In Reply to: Just had to laugh. posted by Erik Ks Farmer on December 07, 2010 at 06:28:11:
Here is a good one too. I used to make fifteen to twenty thousand small squares each year. You did what you had too in the eighties. I had several thousand bales of perfect timothy hay, green as alfalfa. A hay buyer came and wanted the whole lot. He was even willing to pay me more to store the hay until winter. I agreed with the proviso that I had to be paid in full before Dec. 1st plus a deposit to seal the deal. Dec. came and went, no hay buyer. The next April he called and told me he was coming after "his" hay. I told him to come and get his deposit back. I had sold it after calling him six times, with no answer, and mailing him a certified letter in Feb. He came out to my place and started threating me physically for selling his hay. Well lets just say that the knowledge learned in Nam was still good. LOL After he was cooled down by this old man. He did admit he had gotten my messages but hay price was going up so he was waiting to get it. I told him all he had to do was pay me and we could have worked storage out. AFTER THAT I never held or saved hay for NO ONE. First come first served. ALSO cash before loading. I mean cash too no rubber checks.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Profile: Allis-Chalmers Model G - by Staff. The first Allis-Chalmers Model G was produced in 1948 in Gasden, Alabama, and was designed for vegetable gardeners, small farms and landscape businesses. It is a small compact tractor that came with a complete line of implements especially tailored for its unique design. It featured a rear-mounted Continental N62 four-cylinder engine with a 2-3/8 x 3-1/2 inch bore and stroke. The rear-mounted engine provided traction for the rear wheels while at the same time gave the tractor operator a gre
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