I thought about hitching up the topper and running round with the tractor but in the end decided that the time it would take me to un-hitch the plough, wedge it securely upright, hitch up the topper, unhitch the topper and re-hitch the plough ready for the next piece of field I need to prepare would be significantly longer than using the walk behind mower. It only took a couple of hours and was quite enjoyable, I think I appreciated the work out after being indoors for so long.
In the process of going round I lost a nut and bolt I’d put on to help hold the handles on. For some reason nothing has ever stayed put in that place. The original bolt lasted about a month and then I put it back every other week for a few months until I lost it completely. I didn’t think I stood a chance of finding the nut, bolt and two washers from this go but for a laugh got out the toy metal detector I bough my daughter when she was much younger.
Sure enough, nothing, until I got to the area I mowed after I’d seen I’d lost the fixings. The detector gave a long clear buzz, I moved my steel toecaps well back and checked again; it had really found something. All my old dreams of becoming an archaeologist and finding buried treasure came rushing back and I raced back to the house to get a trowel.
2 comments:
Hi Deborah, I've got this lovely image of you in your steel toeys with your sleeve rolled up! Why is it whenever you get ready to do a job, which you think will take half an hour something malfunctions. That small job ends up wasting a whole afternoon. My neighbour says it's the Dordogne curse. I'm a bit more realistic and say it's coz we all have more equipment out here and it gets USED! We found a cow shoe with our detector, an of course mushrooms. Debs
That curse has spread to Lot et Garonne! May rant about it today, if I don't cry :-D
The car is an Espace but it's a diesel and it needed the timing/cam belt changed which is a major job plus bits like a new water pump. The hope is that that should be the last really big service for 200,000 kilometres or so - we shall see!
I liked your mushroom detector, now if you could tune it to distinguish between poisonous and non-poisonous ones you'd make a fortune.
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