Ashytn gets the pregnant lady/soon to be Mom of the year award. Just simply awesome to see her out there, making sure Mike doesn't spend to much time talking to himself and us :)
YUCK!!! What a mess! As the lettering said 'last time you unplugged a Fendt combine' tells me one of two things you went on an emergency combine shopping trip the next morning or you've had enough of figuring out the mysteries of the grain business 😁 and let someone else finish the lentils
Thanks Mike and Ashtyn For letting us ride along with you in the good times and the hard times. The different between the North farm and the South farm is great viewing. Lovely to see husband and wife working together to build a future for your family. God bless you both.
Back in the late '50's my mom would drive the grain trucks for dad. Some of the ladies in town asked her if the trucks had power steering and she'd just laugh and say, "Depends on how long it's been since dinner!"
Mike, I love the way you're doing the videos right now. When you break to make a phone call or talk to somebody on the radio it makes me feel like I'm right there farming with you. I find myself giving advice because I feel like I'm right there. Don't take any of my advice, LOL. Great job!
Hey Mike, now we know why the Fendt combine comes with on board compressed air, so you can blow yourself down after an hour sweating clearing out the chopper. Those clever Germans think of everything!
Mike;As the combine plugging is quite a common issue,have you ever tried a 3 prong cultivator gardening hand tool?,could tweak the prongs with a little heat for more curvature if needed,probably would not work as well as the tools we were born with,just a thought.
@@mikemitchell2554 gleaner combines actually come from the factory with a hook on a stick for if you plug the back end or need to clean out straw to shut the stone trap door. Seems the Italian agco detachment thought they were too good for a hooky stick, but let's be real, no combine is too good for a hooky stick
If I had to clean out a combine every day it would be gone never ever have I plugged the rear end of any sts or s combine. I don’t think y’all have much either
I've been thinking on this everytime I watch Mike unplug a combine. Would a large reinforced nylon blade with a small hook on the end, like a skinning knife, not help? Like on a 5 foot lightweight pole or something. Helps grab, pull, and cut out all in one action. And nylon protects the combine cutting blades.
Love it Mike spends about 10 minutes about the plugging process, and how he loves unplugging combines at 11PM on a Friday night. While filming pregnant Ashytn doing the work. Got love her for getting it done, and not killing him for not helping.
hi .... I like to watch your great videos. come from the north of germany and here we are already in full swing with the sowing of rye and barley for 2022 and you have been threshing since. keep up the great videos, stay healthy
Ashtyn is the baddest chick there ever was. She's a hell of a role model too. All these other woman cry and complain, she just does it and gets done what needs to get done.
Troublesome things lentils! The was an item on tv about red lentils in Sri Lanka. To split them they are soaked in water for 12 hours, I think, might have been 24, then some sort of oil for another six hours, then the skin/husk can be removed and the lentil split. Guy in the program went to someone's house and cooked split lentils and the ones with their skin on, needless to say the split were so much nicer. Great work Ashtyn, Mike and Bently, thank you for letting us tag along!
Hey Mike... we run cr New Holland. This year we added jd powercast spreaders on the back instead of the original tailboard. We have problems with the back plugging in green stuff now. Only guess is the powercast tailboard changes the amount of vacuum created by the copper and won't feed properly. Could be those little impellers on the sides of the tailboard. Never had problems before this year.
That was a "soon to be parent test Mike'' Good job remembering to get Bently :) and I wish you could have been able to film the getting him and you into the combine lol
God Bless Mighty Mike our Hardest working Farmer! I love you Brother! You inspire us to keep rolling! Thank you for teaching us EVERYTHING ABOUT FARMING AND BEING A REALLY WONDERFUL PERSON TOO! ❤️🖖🏼🇺🇸
Add a Milwaukee reciprocating saw to your arsenal with a 12” blade on it and use that when you plug up. Run it right across the back where you are trying to pull out piece by piece.
Hi from Scotland Mike ,Why dont you carry a 4 or 5 ft length of 10mm bar with a hook bent on the end this would make things much easier to unplug your combine. Thanks Kevin, PS All the best to you and Ashtyn when the little one arrives great channel by the way keep up the ace work
Mike when you HAVE to clean out that mess, instead of wrecking your fingers, keep one of those small claw tools for working with your flowers and gardening, cheap and saves the hands,.
the claas machines have a few answers for your problems.. likely have a few of thier own but they have a sensor that says plugged when it builds pressure below the rotors. the plate physically moves but i have only once had it happen in super green canola. also the wiper is centered so never in the way. also what works well to unplug that is a fifth wheel puller.. the hook can grab more then you can by hand
i know you guys cover a shit ton of ground in a year but damn we got custom cutters down here running deere case ih and new holland and do not have the troubles you have i see how well you maintain your stuff and feel safe saying you have a top notch maintance program and still have bearings going out and all these plug ups that is just not good for the company that builds that fendit combine for sure on a better note hope ashtyn and the baby are doing well and are healthy thanks for what you doing up there
Your comment about the "empty heads" reminded me of farming with my dad. He would think the wheat looked real good until he got in the middle of it with the combine and saw it wasn't. Then he started standing on the cab of his pickup to look at the wheat -- the extra height gave him a better perspective on how good it was. quandary a real poor crop puts the farmer in -- is it cheaper to run the combine over it for just a few bushels/acre or is it cheaper to spray/plow the volunteer from the grain left in the head.
I'm guessing he will be running the new John Deere x9 combine next year. Think it would be good advertising to run a few different brands. Side by side comparison in the same conditions. Of course one does have to set the machines correctly. The new John Deere is pretty impressive. Far as how much I can get done. And use less fuel. No more Fendts for Mike. Lol
Do the John Deere combines block up like the ideals??? And you should get a field bin. They are basically silos on wheels and an auger out the back of it. Over here in Australia we use them all the time, even on large scale farms ,so then the grain carts and semis and combines aren't rushing and trying to keep up
Looks like the alarms could be fixed… Don’t see the dealer around as much these days. Guess they realized how much money they were losing on the service side getting reimbursed from Agco on those bumper to bumper warranty claims. That and/or they see no chance to sell you ideals again so they’re not trying as hard
They're on the opposite side of the province as those Massey/Fendt dealers. Those full line ag dealers are only in western sask and theyre farming by her parents in east central sask. I dont think the agco massey dealers on the east side are fendt dealers.
We found on the lexion a sold paddle in back was creating a turbulence in the chopper and not allowing the straw to be spread out correctly. As soon as we put finger paddles on it doesn’t crest the wind turbulence and spreads evenly. Might be something to check out with them chopper issues!
I just combined a field of 72 bu. green stem soybeans with a JD S780 .Straw tough as heck,the thought that the chopper might plug never occured to me, because it never has .If Fendt wanted to solve the problem they would have after 3 years .Maybe they should look at some other brand's choppers for ideas of what they did wrong .
Might be a stupid question, because you've done so much and already tried or can't, but I know with the older Claas Lexion hybrids (don't know about the new ones), they tend to plug the chopper in OSR/Canola. The issue is, that due to the speed of the chopper, it creates sort of an "air cushion" over the chopper, so the material floats a little bit and then drops (if I remember correct). To prevent that, you can slow down the chopper and everything is fine. I've seen it while combining in Latvia, one Claas was always plugging in OSR and once he reduced the speed, no more unplugging. Maybe it's kind of the same in those Agco combines. But since it said, no more unplugging the fendt for you, i guess you already did or want to trade those ideals in for something else and it doesn't matter anymore haha
We now have a pro chop on our 760 claas vs we had a turbo chop on our old one BIC BIG difference (a million times better) the thing about a claas chopper in general always has to have super sharp blades
All combines have something they can’t do. There’s not one perfect machine out there, especially when you farm multiple types of crops. One year I had 7 different crops to run through the same combine. Biggest problem I have with my caseih combine is chopping and spreading flax straw. I always end up having to drop the straw bc the spreader just clogs up every time.
I thought those machines had a chopper issue this whole time but it looks like the rotors mince the crop too much and makes it a powder before chopper even gets it!
Hi there that is one hell of a job . I have done that years ago we had massey's they used to bock up going down hill when they was Kelly thistles. Good fun up on the straw walkers cleaning it out. Mike you have a million dollar wife there such a great lady. In fact I know you wouldn't take a billion for her. Lol 😆. God bless you both and hope you e Get to enjoy your new baby when it arrives
Mike, have you guys not considered fashioning up some kind of hook to use then unplugging combines? Maybe some old rebar and some method to bend it up so you have a handle, a good 4 foot length and then a hook on the end? Just jam that thing into the straw and give it a good pull. Would save you have to reach in and do it all with your hands.
The pressure pads don't seem to be working. There has to be a better way to tell you if the flow of chaff has ceased. Maybe a little wheel with paddles on it or similar... if the wheel stops getting turned by the out going chaff for too long the computer could then pop an alert.
@@juliushollmann9938 I was dummy this year and tried running dull chopper blades on my 670 it kept bridging with straw, flipping the chopper knives solved that issue. You must do better maintenance then me haha
Geesh that clog has to be frustrating as all get-out! - but I'm sure you've come to terms with it and accept it as part of the mission, as it give you an opportunity to give your arms and fingers a good stretch after all that combining, amirite?💪
So if this is the last time you're unplugging a fendt combine, I assume you're making a change to a different line of machines.. hmm the foreshadowing has me quite curious
Hi Mike. Is it practical to make up a mini auger type attachment and attach to a low speed battery drill. Something that may help you get a decent tuft to pull out. I know it wont go around corners and behind stuff.
Shout out to ashtyn. Being a farmer myself, that wife is golden mike
Ashytn gets the pregnant lady/soon to be Mom of the year award. Just simply awesome to see her out there, making sure Mike doesn't spend to much time talking to himself and us :)
YUCK!!! What a mess! As the lettering said 'last time you unplugged a Fendt combine' tells me one of two things you went on an emergency combine shopping trip the next morning or you've had enough of figuring out the mysteries of the grain business 😁 and let someone else finish the lentils
"trudeau wheat"! 😆
It is amazing how fast your hopper empties into the grain cart.
You really have a good wife,the way she is by your site during harvest into the night 👌🏼👍🏻
Thanks Mike and Ashtyn For letting us ride along with you in the good times and the hard times. The different between the North farm and the South farm is great viewing. Lovely to see husband and wife working together to build a future for your family. God bless you both.
Wow, given the cost and sophistication of those, I can't believe the blockages can't be avoided....and cleared easier too!!🤨🤔
Ashtons probably thinking if he only bought a case
Mike you are one funny guy😂
can't wait to see the new combines
Trudeau barley ! All length and no head 😂 brilliant 👍
That would be a no deal. Hat off to you mike I would have sent that combine down the road two years ago
Congratulations 👏 new addition to the family 👼
Back in the late '50's my mom would drive the grain trucks for dad. Some of the ladies in town asked her if the trucks had power steering and she'd just laugh and say, "Depends on how long it's been since dinner!"
You Mike, are obviously a hard workin dude. Your wife is amazing. I have had 3 of them. They usually don't work hard. So. hats off to your woman.
Mike, I love the way you're doing the videos right now. When you break to make a phone call or talk to somebody on the radio it makes me feel like I'm right there farming with you. I find myself giving advice because I feel like I'm right there. Don't take any of my advice, LOL. Great job!
City kid here...no suggestions...just Thank You folks for letting me tag along!
24:09 "I don't know . . . somethin' doesn't feel right in the butt." LOL
Thats a very clean grain tank .
Hey Mike, now we know why the Fendt combine comes with on board compressed air, so you can blow yourself down after an hour sweating clearing out the chopper. Those clever Germans think of everything!
Mike;As the combine plugging is quite a common issue,have you ever tried a 3 prong cultivator gardening hand tool?,could tweak the prongs with a little heat for more curvature if needed,probably would not work as well as the tools we were born with,just a thought.
I have not, tho it would prb help
@@mikemitchell2554 gleaner combines actually come from the factory with a hook on a stick for if you plug the back end or need to clean out straw to shut the stone trap door. Seems the Italian agco detachment thought they were too good for a hooky stick, but let's be real, no combine is too good for a hooky stick
I've been thinking a similar thing, if it plugs often I'd be making a tool or two to assist
If I had to clean out a combine every day it would be gone never ever have I plugged the rear end of any sts or s combine. I don’t think y’all have much either
I've been thinking on this everytime I watch Mike unplug a combine. Would a large reinforced nylon blade with a small hook on the end, like a skinning knife, not help? Like on a 5 foot lightweight pole or something. Helps grab, pull, and cut out all in one action. And nylon protects the combine cutting blades.
Love it Mike spends about 10 minutes about the plugging process, and how he loves unplugging combines at 11PM on a Friday night. While filming pregnant Ashytn doing the work. Got love her for getting it done, and not killing him for not helping.
My thoughts exactly! But he does get in there and get it done eventually.
If the brass at AGCO doesn't tell Fendt engineers to solve the plugging problem then the CEO needs to be fired.
hi .... I like to watch your great videos. come from the north of germany and here we are already in full swing with the sowing of rye and barley for 2022 and you have been threshing since.
keep up the great videos,
stay healthy
Thank you Ashtyn and Mike.
If it’s a dirty job then you need mike Rowe
My daughter was born November 6, and my first child 1979. And I was dairy farming. Mike your going to spoil that baby, No doubt. Congratulations.
Ashtyn is the baddest chick there ever was. She's a hell of a role model too. All these other woman cry and complain, she just does it and gets done what needs to get done.
That’s how good sask farm girls are unbelievable work ethic and commitment!
Troublesome things lentils! The was an item on tv about red lentils in Sri Lanka. To split them they are soaked in water for 12 hours, I think, might have been 24, then some sort of oil for another six hours, then the skin/husk can be removed and the lentil split. Guy in the program went to someone's house and cooked split lentils and the ones with their skin on, needless to say the split were so much nicer.
Great work Ashtyn, Mike and Bently, thank you for letting us tag along!
Hey Mike... we run cr New Holland. This year we added jd powercast spreaders on the back instead of the original tailboard. We have problems with the back plugging in green stuff now. Only guess is the powercast tailboard changes the amount of vacuum created by the copper and won't feed properly. Could be those little impellers on the sides of the tailboard. Never had problems before this year.
That was a "soon to be parent test Mike'' Good job remembering to get Bently :) and I wish you could have been able to film the getting him and you into the combine lol
Need a crop collection bin in the field so can keep going with fast load and unload system.use them in Australia quite a bit. Maybe not proper term.
God Bless Mighty Mike our Hardest working Farmer! I love you Brother! You inspire us to keep rolling! Thank you for teaching us EVERYTHING ABOUT FARMING AND BEING A REALLY WONDERFUL PERSON TOO! ❤️🖖🏼🇺🇸
Add a Milwaukee reciprocating saw to your arsenal with a 12” blade on it and use that when you plug up. Run it right across the back where you are trying to pull out piece by piece.
Stay tuned for Fridays video! 😂
Mike’s reply has be going “uh oh. What did he do?” Lol
@@mikemitchell2554 u going to go get a Case Combine this week Good luck. Iv got 5800 acres of corn n beans to get out in southwest iowa
Or...Time to admit you gave it a try and it's time to move on. I see the Welkers run Case.
Hi from Scotland Mike ,Why dont you carry a 4 or 5 ft length of 10mm bar with a hook bent on the end this would make things much easier to unplug your combine.
Thanks Kevin,
PS All the best to you and Ashtyn when the little one arrives great channel by the way keep up the ace work
You should put a sticker on that tractor with the text:pregnant woman on board.
Nice sunset though.😃
Mike when you HAVE to clean out that mess, instead of wrecking your fingers, keep one of those small claw tools for working with your flowers and gardening, cheap and saves the hands,.
the claas machines have a few answers for your problems.. likely have a few of thier own but they have a sensor that says plugged when it builds pressure below the rotors. the plate physically moves but i have only once had it happen in super green canola. also the wiper is centered so never in the way. also what works well to unplug that is a fifth wheel puller.. the hook can grab more then you can by hand
your a lucky fellow mike. not many girls would dig out your combine. hat off to Ashtyn.
Most of them would sit at home and do their nails!
i know you guys cover a shit ton of ground in a year but damn we got custom cutters down here running deere case ih and new holland and do not have the troubles you have i see how well you maintain your stuff and feel safe saying you have a top notch maintance program and still have bearings going out and all these plug ups that is just not good for the company that builds that fendit combine for sure on a better note hope ashtyn and the baby are doing well and are healthy thanks for what you doing up there
Congrats on your first baby
Why not carry a narrow rake to reach up and in? like three or four feet long? I think I would
I get that road bounce pulling my Baler behind the 7410. Doesn’t matter what speed I try or how smooth the road is
Good luck Ashton gal !!
U need to carry a "hay hook" in the cab. I think you could reach in with one of these and speed up your unplugging. Just a thought.
Trudeau wheat perfect analogy
Aston is so helpful on the farm, An with a class 1. Didn’t know she had one
You don’t need a class 1 to drive truck. The truck will start anyways. These 16 year old hutt kids don’t need class 1….. till they get stopped
@@theoroseboom-ranch-rimbey6636 Then confront them an tell it to their boss Go tell em. Don’t try a fox it on social media
Your comment about the "empty heads" reminded me of farming with my dad. He would think the wheat looked real good until he got in the middle of it with the combine and saw it wasn't. Then he started standing on the cab of his pickup to look at the wheat -- the extra height gave him a better perspective on how good it was.
quandary a real poor crop puts the farmer in -- is it cheaper to run the combine over it for just a few bushels/acre or is it cheaper to spray/plow the volunteer from the grain left in the head.
can't wait too see a baby mike
Im south the border and even I got the joke about the fancy socks playwright.
Good show, enough is enough. You've put up with this issue for too long. Your patience must be astronomical.
😝😝😝😝😝😝team work, that call happy wife happy life.😂😂😂😂😂😂
I'm guessing he will be running the new John Deere x9 combine next year. Think it would be good advertising to run a few different brands. Side by side comparison in the same conditions. Of course one does have to set the machines correctly.
The new John Deere is pretty impressive. Far as how much I can get done. And use less fuel.
No more Fendts for Mike. Lol
When you call the Terminal you can play the “Pregnant Wife Card” to allow for a late unload
Haha might have even done that 🤔😂
Also, loving the fire wood, haven't had alot time to enjoy it yet, but have snuck a couple in there 🙂
@@mikemitchell2554 I have burning at least 3 containers each night along with a couple bottles of wine. 🔥🔥🍷🍷🔥🔥
Do the John Deere combines block up like the ideals??? And you should get a field bin. They are basically silos on wheels and an auger out the back of it. Over here in Australia we use them all the time, even on large scale farms ,so then the grain carts and semis and combines aren't rushing and trying to keep up
Looks like the alarms could be fixed… Don’t see the dealer around as much these days. Guess they realized how much money they were losing on the service side getting reimbursed from Agco on those bumper to bumper warranty claims. That and/or they see no chance to sell you ideals again so they’re not trying as hard
They're on the opposite side of the province as those Massey/Fendt dealers. Those full line ag dealers are only in western sask and theyre farming by her parents in east central sask. I dont think the agco massey dealers on the east side are fendt dealers.
We found on the lexion a sold paddle in back was creating a turbulence in the chopper and not allowing the straw to be spread out correctly. As soon as we put finger paddles on it doesn’t crest the wind turbulence and spreads evenly. Might be something to check out with them chopper issues!
Fleet of Yellow combines next year?
Love the videos Mike!
Bentley is the best co-pilot 😍
I just combined a field of 72 bu. green stem soybeans with a JD S780 .Straw tough as heck,the thought that the chopper might plug never occured to me, because it never has .If Fendt wanted to solve the problem they would have after 3 years .Maybe they should look at some other brand's choppers for ideas of what they did wrong .
Mike you need a Lexion if you plug them above chopper you just undo five 13mm bolts 1/2” to you and it all falls out 🤦♂️
Wait mike congratulations you gonna beca dad i didnt even knew it 🥳
So we’ve got a s790i hillmaster 4wd for the hills in uk, we were on a hill unloading and the hill got steeper so it hillmastered more then kaboosh
Might be a stupid question, because you've done so much and already tried or can't, but I know with the older Claas Lexion hybrids (don't know about the new ones), they tend to plug the chopper in OSR/Canola. The issue is, that due to the speed of the chopper, it creates sort of an "air cushion" over the chopper, so the material floats a little bit and then drops (if I remember correct). To prevent that, you can slow down the chopper and everything is fine. I've seen it while combining in Latvia, one Claas was always plugging in OSR and once he reduced the speed, no more unplugging. Maybe it's kind of the same in those Agco combines.
But since it said, no more unplugging the fendt for you, i guess you already did or want to trade those ideals in for something else and it doesn't matter anymore haha
That’s what we did with our lexion, just slow down the straw chopper 👍🏼
For me must be that, i dont run a ideal but this seems a great suggestion
We now have a pro chop on our 760 claas vs we had a turbo chop on our old one BIC BIG difference (a million times better) the thing about a claas chopper in general always has to have super sharp blades
@@dannyfinch6700 also sharp knives help to pull straw through a bit better , I was told .rounded knife tips dont help . that was on a claas.
i think your right.. slow speed would probably do it
So I guess he is getting rid of those Ideals for nesxt season, by the text in the video that it´s the last time Mike is unplugging a Fendt combine
Does Ashtyn have a single sister lol that's a dying breed women. God bless guys
All combines have something they can’t do. There’s not one perfect machine out there, especially when you farm multiple types of crops. One year I had 7 different crops to run through the same combine. Biggest problem I have with my caseih combine is chopping and spreading flax straw. I always end up having to drop the straw bc the spreader just clogs up every time.
Ya weve also found that in the case, and the massey also. None like flax
Thumbs up for the Trudeau wheat joke. Hey their are Red combines in Canada.
agreed on the Trudeau joke. there are red combines and I think Ashtyn wants one
Problem solved!
@@peterdecker59 yes no more fendt
I thought those machines had a chopper issue this whole time but it looks like the rotors mince the crop too much and makes it a powder before chopper even gets it!
Hi there that is one hell of a job . I have done that years ago we had massey's they used to bock up going down hill when they was Kelly thistles. Good fun up on the straw walkers cleaning it out.
Mike you have a million dollar wife there such a great lady. In fact I know you wouldn't take a billion for her. Lol 😆.
God bless you both and hope you e
Get to enjoy your new baby when it arrives
Great video!
Mike, have you guys not considered fashioning up some kind of hook to use then unplugging combines? Maybe some old rebar and some method to bend it up so you have a handle, a good 4 foot length and then a hook on the end? Just jam that thing into the straw and give it a good pull. Would save you have to reach in and do it all with your hands.
We used a spear with a reverse hook, worked great.
Mike : This will be the last time Mike will unplugging a Fendt combine
Me : Mike goes Claas combines 2022?
Claas or maybe X9s? Might be an issue to get one though unless he's already ordered it.
Claas are in a league of their own
is not newholland good combine 10 90 cr.?
newholland cr 1090 is that a good combine.. They sell many newholland here in sweden
@@juliantangney6855 the new X9’s are monsters apparently
The pressure pads don't seem to be working. There has to be a better way to tell you if the flow of chaff has ceased. Maybe a little wheel with paddles on it or similar... if the wheel stops getting turned by the out going chaff for too long the computer could then pop an alert.
I wonder if the gleaners and New Hollands have the same troubles.
That blocking up is so frustrating, must be getting close to be looking at a change of colour
In my best Arnold voice GET TO THE CHOPPER
"Unplug the choppa"
My wife just made some beef and barley soup that was out of this world!
Looks like a fifth wheel pin puller would be a handy tool to have for unplugging the chopper.
with the terminal waiting and helping out your wife, i would say that is at least one, probably two cases to make up for it ;)
i bet 1 of those little garden racks like the little 3 prong deals would work good for that
Well..... At least you didn't plug in Barley. Damn itchy Barley...
Have you ever considered buying a Shelbourne stripper header? Would be quite easy to harvest those hills without picking up rocks.
So if this is the last time Mike will be unplugging a Fendt combine, does that mean he's trading it in for a Lexion? Deere? New Holland? CaseIH?
i have ran an old 670 Lexion, at 105-107% engine Load no Chance to plug the machine, at around 6-7t/ha barley with a lot of straw to chop
I have plugged the cylinder on my Lexion 580r but never the rotors or chopper. Not saying it isn't possible though.
@@juliushollmann9938 I was dummy this year and tried running dull chopper blades on my 670 it kept bridging with straw, flipping the chopper knives solved that issue. You must do better maintenance then me haha
Pretty sure Mike likes the Deeres. He has had alot of time on them and knows them in and out.
His lease is probably up so time to look at something else??!!
Geesh that clog has to be frustrating as all get-out!
- but I'm sure you've come to terms with it and accept it as part of the mission, as it give you an opportunity to give your arms and fingers a good stretch after all that combining, amirite?💪
So if this is the last time you're unplugging a fendt combine, I assume you're making a change to a different line of machines.. hmm the foreshadowing has me quite curious
Get rid of that machine a total design flaw
@@georgedavidson1221 haha no its not. Just a bad designed chopper, it should go down and then out.
Mike. Is there anything in there that you would damage if you used a fifth wheel hook to help clean out the plug? If only for the first half.
I'm sorry for all of your troubles, Mike. :(
This has been a very challenging year.
Thank you for taking us along with you though.
I can just see it now how Mike will make his next million: “Transparent Windshield Wipers”.
Mike I have a question. How many times have you plugged the rear end of a John Deere combine in lentils?
4-Tine Forged Garden Cultivator, DeWit 3-Tine Cultivator, or a hay hook for cleaning out a plugged combine.
Good lights for road at night
Good afternoon
So in saying this is the last time Mike will be unplugging, does that mean the Fendts are going down the road?
I think so.
You need an Irish Billhook for that unplugging job, would sort that in half the time.
Hello Mike big big 🇨🇦👨🌾🌾😉🤞🇮🇹
Hi Mike. Is it practical to make up a mini auger type attachment and attach to a low speed battery drill. Something that may help you get a decent tuft to pull out. I know it wont go around corners and behind stuff.
Hows the crops at the other farm?