love the vid. I ran a a tr70 with a 4 row wide head for a long time. great old machines actually. cab on mine had all the foam missing. one year had my tr 86 go down hard and ended up using my tr 70. Didnt have working heat and it was december in minnesota. Needless to say a combined for a few weeks with a sunflower heater next to my leg.
Im from norway and i love your videos,, i think i have seen at lest 20 of them.. i find your dialect quite funny, cind of putting pressure on the last word in each sentence. hehe
If I could, I would never see another soy bean. There's just something about tall stalks, straight rows and giant, magnificent ears of grain!! But so much volume to handle.
@@boehmfarm4276 Yeah my BIL makes 60 bushels average year in year out on mixed soils (lot of sandier lighter soils but mixed bag-- his soil maps look like a "paint by numbers" book LOL:) (mine look like a blank sheet of paper with one or two small sandier spots). I think you can get there with a little tweaking... sure makes a difference to the bottom line! Here we pretty much top out at 25 bushels to the acre-- you can get that, you're living right because you're blessed! 20 bushels is "average" here, 15 is okay. BUT we're in Texas on the Coastal Plains. My BIL is in northern Indiana near Rochester... been through your area a time or two... My wife's cousins farm in southern Indiana in the hill country over southeast of Terre Haute, little town called Spencer west of Bloomington. They raise corn and beans too, hay and cattle, and sold off their tobacco allotment and equipment. Later! OL J R :)
Yep his buddy was in there busting out the frozen crap by the looks of it... someone was perched up at the top looking over when he walked by it in the twilight... OL J R :)
Looking good Hoss ! I like it when I cant make a round around the field without filling the grain tank , But its a problem I like to have ! LOL There's not much of a surprise for me , LOL Keep up the great work your doing. Bandit
LOL I aint going to spoil it for you ! I've been waiting for the video on it, Wouldn't dream of it. But I've been waiting quietly for the big revel ! Never know who you might meet at a sale ! LOL Bandit
Looks like your corn is yielding very well. I to plant on wide rows, thought I was the only one. What variety of corn are you harvesting? Take care, see you next post.
In than area it yielded very well. Unfortunately there was a wet spot where mud popped off my fertilizer drive chain. And planting after dark to get done, two acres didn't have any starter--- that area suffered a bit. We still plant wide rows because of the ten acres of sweet corn we plant. 30 inch rows are tight for picking sweet corn. This corn came from a little place called Federal Hybrids based out of Iowa. RK112-16 Rural king sells their corn seed at about half the cost of your local seed dealer.
@@guseberriesdoublergusefarm5936 If he's making 150 bushels/acre off it and not spending over $100/acre on seed, I think he's coming out ahead. Sometimes it's not what you make, it's what you SAVE... High yields that are less profitable per acre because of higher expenses just make money for the elevator owners, grain buyers, and seed/fertilizer input sales guys... and make you work harder harvesting and drying and hauling it all away... Later! OL J R :)
love the vid. I ran a a tr70 with a 4 row wide head for a long time. great old machines actually. cab on mine had all the foam missing. one year had my tr 86 go down hard and ended up using my tr 70. Didnt have working heat and it was december in minnesota. Needless to say a combined for a few weeks with a sunflower heater next to my leg.
There's a TR86 in my future.
Im from norway and i love your videos,, i think i have seen at lest 20 of them..
i find your dialect quite funny, cind of putting pressure on the last word in each sentence. hehe
Thank you for your viewership.
Glad you are getting your corn harvested. Looks like it is yielding good. Best of luck for the rest.
I need lots of luck, and you'll see why..... keep that gravity wagon in mind.
Good to see your getting it done, O, and thanks for making us wait for the surprize. lol
All in a days work. Your're welcome for the wait LOL
We own green equipment, but my cousin has new Holland combines and the engines on them are mean sounding....
👍👌🇨🇦❤
I love combining corn well beans to but I like corn most
If I could, I would never see another soy bean. There's just something about tall stalks, straight rows and giant, magnificent ears of grain!! But so much volume to handle.
Boehm Farm ya but beans are how you make money
We actually do better with corn. Hopefully we can get our bean crop up in yields so we can do better next year.
@@boehmfarm4276 Yeah my BIL makes 60 bushels average year in year out on mixed soils (lot of sandier lighter soils but mixed bag-- his soil maps look like a "paint by numbers" book LOL:) (mine look like a blank sheet of paper with one or two small sandier spots). I think you can get there with a little tweaking... sure makes a difference to the bottom line! Here we pretty much top out at 25 bushels to the acre-- you can get that, you're living right because you're blessed! 20 bushels is "average" here, 15 is okay. BUT we're in Texas on the Coastal Plains. My BIL is in northern Indiana near Rochester... been through your area a time or two... My wife's cousins farm in southern Indiana in the hill country over southeast of Terre Haute, little town called Spencer west of Bloomington. They raise corn and beans too, hay and cattle, and sold off their tobacco allotment and equipment. Later! OL J R :)
Make sure the gravity wagons are closed!!!
Yep his buddy was in there busting out the frozen crap by the looks of it... someone was perched up at the top looking over when he walked by it in the twilight... OL J R :)
You have to listen to that alarm the entire time
After it get running fast enough, it's just one dull roar. And as far as I remember, the stone trap sensor never worked.
Boehm Farm we had to replace ours on our 2166 case
Looking good Hoss ! I like it when I cant make a round around the field without filling the grain tank , But its a problem I like to have ! LOL There's not much of a surprise for me , LOL Keep up the great work your doing. Bandit
Ha, Ha, aren't you funny. It's no surprise because you were there LOL.
LOL I aint going to spoil it for you ! I've been waiting for the video on it, Wouldn't dream of it. But I've been waiting quietly for the big revel ! Never know who you might meet at a sale ! LOL Bandit
👍
Looks like your corn is yielding very well. I to plant on wide rows, thought I was the only one. What variety of corn are you harvesting? Take care, see you next post.
In than area it yielded very well. Unfortunately there was a wet spot where mud popped off my fertilizer drive chain. And planting after dark to get done, two acres didn't have any starter--- that area suffered a bit.
We still plant wide rows because of the ten acres of sweet corn we plant. 30 inch rows are tight for picking sweet corn.
This corn came from a little place called Federal Hybrids based out of Iowa.
RK112-16
Rural king sells their corn seed at about half the cost of your local seed dealer.
Boehm Farm half the yield to! LoL
@@guseberriesdoublergusefarm5936 If he's making 150 bushels/acre off it and not spending over $100/acre on seed, I think he's coming out ahead. Sometimes it's not what you make, it's what you SAVE... High yields that are less profitable per acre because of higher expenses just make money for the elevator owners, grain buyers, and seed/fertilizer input sales guys... and make you work harder harvesting and drying and hauling it all away... Later! OL J R :)
Is the new Holland yours
It resides at the farm, and dad bought it a few years back.
Ok
Are you on the farm full time?
Yes, nothing would happen at home if I had to work elsewhere.
Lol! Not John Deere green!!!!!
You got it.
the way it should be! lol