Disking And A Different Way To Pick Stones

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  • Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
  • Hitched up three horses to the disk harrows and picked some stones with Bill.
    Watch our videos to learn about draft horses- horse logging, horses farming, and horse training! Jim uses Belgian, Percheron, and Suffolk horses to do work on the farm and in the woods. He teaches about harnesses, horse-drawn logging and farming equipment, horse feeding and maintenance, and voice commands for horses. New videos uploaded every week. Keep watching to see how Jim trains his new Suffolk Punch colts as he has trained his full-grown teams!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @daleroth236
    @daleroth236 3 роки тому +2

    We always put our stones on top of the disk and at the end of the field threw them off. Saves getting them stuck between the disks the next year.

  • @hannahshepherd9073
    @hannahshepherd9073 3 роки тому +1

    I can't imagine anything better in the morning than to see those wonderful faces looking back at me! Give them a kiss on the nose for me.

  • @kennydean4512
    @kennydean4512 4 роки тому +4

    The horses being so big and powerful I imagine they expect to do heavy work, and I think it helps when you talk softly to them, I really believe they understand, I am so glad you treat them kindly, I could never abuse any animal,
    I've seen some horses at Country Fairs that are used for pulling competition and they seem eager to pull the sledge as soon as they are hooked to it.

  • @johnkomosa4089
    @johnkomosa4089 2 роки тому

    Good work, Brenda asks good questions..
    My Dad used to chain logs to the disk and cement blocks on that upper shelf, but yeah, differant soil, we needed the extraweight in the marshy grass, low land.
    We had the same problem with the front right, my brother eventually took it all apart for bearings bushings and blades, but it may have ended up a parts disc and replaced.. They wear out. Always stones, that's the advantage of a marsh delta sometimes, low or some yrs, low or no stones. Thanks.
    Looked like a party over by the hay wagon. :-)

  • @clydo1946
    @clydo1946 4 роки тому +1

    Nice crop of rocks. I grow them in Vermont also. Not much of a market for them, but the summer folk are impressed with them.

  • @randolphbutler1832
    @randolphbutler1832 3 роки тому

    With all the prep work your wheat can only do great. Let us see when it germinates . Hope it does well for you. Brother is good source of information. Thank you for sharing.
    🐴🐴🐴

  • @sueheaman7186
    @sueheaman7186 4 роки тому +1

    Love doing good physical farm work!

  • @robbullis5025
    @robbullis5025 3 роки тому +4

    My Grandpa was the youngest of 6 boys. When he was 6 years old he and his brothers were out in the field helping their dad pick rocks. Grandpa was picking rocks the size of small potatoes. His my Great Grandfather asked why he was picking such little rocks? His reply was, if we pick them when are small they won't grow to the big ones the his big brother Edger was trying to lift. My Great Grandfather and Grandpa's brothers all fell down and rolled in the field laughing. It really did feel like they were growing stones some days.

  • @kswaynes7569
    @kswaynes7569 4 роки тому +1

    Nice job, we always had the youngest that could drive a small tractor, drive while a few picked rocks. We usually walked as fast or faster than the tractor but that was exciting times for the young driver, it was for me when I was the youngest.

  • @donvoll2580
    @donvoll2580 4 роки тому +2

    Good day from Ont. We live in waterloo county, were settlers from US came too back in 1800's. I live in house end of farm. our neighbors are nearly all Mennonites. They all have very succesful business. 100 ac, farm 1.5 million $. The neighbors are selling most of there horse machinery to group of Amish or ? & all they use is machinery for horses & old style of farming. Someone said we have 56 different groups of Mennonites here. So all my neighbors will possibly sow with drill& rest is custom. It is interesting watching this. Thanks for now

  • @pocketchange1951
    @pocketchange1951 4 роки тому +1

    👍👌🇨🇦❤, I didmrhe rock picking bu hand just like you were doing until my dad purchase a horse drawn rock picker, saved my back

  • @MrKen-longrangegrdhogeliminato
    @MrKen-longrangegrdhogeliminato 4 роки тому +1

    That is why 5 generations on the Miller Farm picked rocks and more rocks every year, a I hate rocks! lol

  • @arnoldaltjr.2099
    @arnoldaltjr.2099 4 роки тому +7

    Sad that the band was up that early. Much nicer just to hear the creaking of the harness and the rattle of the machinery. I did a lot of that as a kid and we didn't even have a pocket radio.
    .

  • @debbiebjorklund3241
    @debbiebjorklund3241 6 місяців тому

    I was just wondering how you got de rocks outa de field. ❤ a rock boat. 😅 hope yall have a gr8 day. Wishing i cld see de rest of de storry, like putting them away, ect. 'Interesting' i think often.❤. Gr8 to see Tudy be driving them. 😊 ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @haroldsmith45302
    @haroldsmith45302 4 роки тому +2

    01:33
    "Good morning everybody, you're looking beautiful today."
    Buck turned away. He is bashful.

  • @Peter-gi3re
    @Peter-gi3re 3 роки тому +1

    Only getting to catch up on older videos now. That’s quite a lot of rocks to get. The sled works pretty effectively.
    Did you have to get all your equipment custom made? Is there a company that manufactures this gear or should I know better that of course you made it all yourself 😀

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  3 роки тому +1

      I surely didn't make it myself, there are companies that still make horse-drawn equipment. A lot of my equipment is very old but still works well.

  • @patzwahl8341
    @patzwahl8341 3 роки тому +1

    I am fairly new to your channel and am enjoying watching the horses work. How many hours a day can you work them hard pulling an implement? Would like to see a video just on your carts. Are they homemade or purchased? What type of axels were used in the construction of the carts? How wide and why that width....

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks for watching, maybe next summer I"ll have a vid on that when I'm using them again.

    • @alb5489
      @alb5489 3 роки тому

      Pat Zwahl check online, FarmerBrownsPlowShop. He makes the best arch/cart....like the old Packard ad, "Ask the man who owns one."

  • @chipbraker9315
    @chipbraker9315 4 роки тому +1

    Can you do a video on the detail of the stone boat? Not an implement we see in our part of the world, but I think it would
    really come in handy for a single horse hauling hay and fire wood in the winter.

  • @kenparham5747
    @kenparham5747 3 роки тому

    Thats how you work smarter and not harder unloading them rocks

  • @joeromanak8797
    @joeromanak8797 4 роки тому +2

    You’re good at resource management. Give the team a rest while Bill earns his keep. Wouldn’t you think after working the same ground for a few years that the stones would be all picked. The idea that they grow in the field like any other crop is universally accepted by farmers everywhere. Part of the job I guess. Keep those harnesses jingling. 😎👍👏

  • @mattking438
    @mattking438 4 роки тому +1

    Jim,
    Nice explanation of the line arrangement of the lines for three abreast. We had occasion to be in Lancaster county a couple years ago and seen many of the Amish using team lines and a jockey stick for the third horse. Seems hard on the mouth to me. Is rock picking something that has to be done in your part of the country after every spring plowing there? Hope it stays dry enough for you to seed. Inch of rain here today.
    Thank you
    The King family.

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  4 роки тому +1

      Matt King yes, we do have to pick stones whenever we plow. We got our seeding in just in time for some rain. We are blessed.

  • @bearasojrnr
    @bearasojrnr 4 роки тому +1

    Without twine he would more likely than not have to use wire... or duct tape and that would be cost prohibitive if'n ya know what I mean.... ( : used to use burlap bags before the course of plastic.

  • @rodmackinnon8497
    @rodmackinnon8497 4 роки тому +1

    Do love your stone clearing technique . . . but you could pick up an extra 150 lbs if you walked . . . I never hitched a ride when I worked a team, and yes I was a lot younger then. Cheers.

  • @ronaldfeuerstein435
    @ronaldfeuerstein435 4 роки тому +1

    Would have liked to seen how your daughter worked with the Horses to. Are they that clam with others like they are with you?

  • @aas1018
    @aas1018 4 роки тому +5

    I would love to see a video explaining and demonstrating the command and control you use with your horses.

  • @mihalycovaci5839
    @mihalycovaci5839 4 роки тому +1

    👍👍👍

  • @waynelouey854
    @waynelouey854 4 роки тому +1

    hey i know that guy . from northern n. y.

  • @ringmussel
    @ringmussel 4 роки тому +1

    Why do you use the "blindres"?

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  4 роки тому +2

      When I work in the woods, it protects the horses eyes from branches.

  • @MrVailtown
    @MrVailtown 3 роки тому +1

    Less compaction also .

  • @mefirst4266
    @mefirst4266 3 роки тому

    DEAR JIM: I MUST BE MISSING SOMETHING. I MOVED OFF THE FARM INTO THE CITY TO WORK AND WE USED TRACTORS. SO WHY YOU WANT TO GO BACKWARDS.. DO YOU HAVE THE AMMISH FEVER.

  • @mefirst4266
    @mefirst4266 3 роки тому

    HONEY IF WE DON'T SWITCH BACK TO THAT DAMN TRACTOR YOU WILL NEVER GET THAT 4 CARROT DIAMOND....

  • @johnking8679
    @johnking8679 3 роки тому +1

    Small favor to ask, Jim !! Please look towards the camera when you speak. Then we can hear what you're saying !! You presumably have a directional "directional" mike on your camera - so as long as the microphone on your camera is aimed directly at the speaker it can pick up your voice and everyone can hear what you're saying !! Even turning your head to the side we can't hear what you're saying. AND, I hate missing what you're saying Jim !!
    Thank you !!

  • @hacc220able
    @hacc220able 3 роки тому +1

    Over the eons of farming those fields wonder how many thousands of stones have been picked up and removed by countless farmers.

  • @Bret4207
    @Bret4207 3 роки тому +1

    Nice stone boat!

  • @bobanmilosevic3897
    @bobanmilosevic3897 3 роки тому +1

    👍😊

  • @ginog4480
    @ginog4480 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you.Rest assured, everything you have to tell is of interest to me. Do feel there's an advantage of the sled over something with wheels?

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  4 роки тому +2

      As far as stones go, it is easier to load the stone boat because you don't have to lift the rocks so high.

  • @hootche1
    @hootche1 4 роки тому +2

    Jimm just my observation, when you were discing looking at the horses walking towards you
    the two black horses were scuffing the ground with there front foot toes, with a puff of dust,
    the brown horse was walking with a flat foot and not scuffing his toes,
    it may be just the breed , your the man to ask.

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  4 роки тому +1

      You are way more observant than I am, sometime when I have more time, I’ll have to go back and look at it.

  • @mmanut
    @mmanut 4 роки тому +1

    Very clever. Great system. your horses are well trained and you treat them with respect. THANK YOU. Vinny 🇺🇸

  • @mefirst4266
    @mefirst4266 3 роки тому

    NEIBORS DRIVING BY: LOOK SALLY NOW HE IS SLEDING IN THE SUMMER TIME. ED I TOLD YOU THEM HORSES WOULD GET TO HIM............

  • @ronnietaylor2488
    @ronnietaylor2488 3 роки тому +1

    I am so impressed how mild mannered your horses are good work Jim training them good team

  • @russlong7175
    @russlong7175 Рік тому

    At 12:13 that's the way to unload a stone boat. We didn't have one of those.

  • @haroldrobertson582
    @haroldrobertson582 4 роки тому +1

    Bill, Harold again from NC. How often do you have to re-shoe the horses, and, except for working,
    do the horses stay in the stalls all the time? Well, maybe just a pun. Since the horses don't know if
    you want them to back up 6 inches, or 2 feet, it's good to see that you have all of your fingers🤘😷
    do

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  4 роки тому +1

      We shoe every 6-8 weeks and no, they don’t stay in their stalls all the time, they go out to the barnyard a lot and in the summer they go out to pasture

  • @bobjarrard
    @bobjarrard 3 роки тому

    I hate rocks, all rocks, even little rocks. Also anything man made in my dirt. Bob

  • @darltennant6005
    @darltennant6005 4 роки тому +1

    He is not harrowing, he is dishing!

    • @alb5489
      @alb5489 3 роки тому +2

      He is not dishing either. :-)) Discing or disking mebbee, eh??

    • @alb5489
      @alb5489 3 роки тому +1

      Darl Tennant Looks like he is using a disc harrow to harrow or disc the field.

  • @klauskarbaumer6302
    @klauskarbaumer6302 4 роки тому +2

    When you have horses standing in front of a forecart and disk with nobody at their heads while the traces are being hooked, you really have to be able to trust them. All hell could break loose, if they decided to walk or take off. Your horses are behaving perfectly.

    • @WorkingHorsesWithJim
      @WorkingHorsesWithJim  4 роки тому +2

      Klaus Karbaumer ha ha they don’t always act perfect

    • @klauskarbaumer6302
      @klauskarbaumer6302 4 роки тому +3

      @@WorkingHorsesWithJim I have had horses for 57 years, I can tell when they are perfect. I had horses that could be treated like yours, but those that I have now, and since I do not work them a fraction of what you do, I only hitch at a hitch-rail or directly in the barn. I am writing this primarily for people who might not have the experience and would try to copy what you do. That's only for the horse master!!!

    • @hejnye
      @hejnye 4 роки тому +2

      yep safety first

  • @mefirst4266
    @mefirst4266 3 роки тому

    YOU KNOW HONEY THAT TRACTOR IS A 75 HORSE POWER AND I ONLY GOT 3 HERE TODAY,,,,,,,