Quail_Antwerp
Cold is on the Right, Hot is on The Left
oh, btw, when I read your post to E, he almost fell off his chair over the whole "didn't want to get his tractor wet". He said that so wouldn't have hurt his tractor!
Oh, ok thenBeekissed said:Pat, those layers were RIR and Aussies
Definitely.If you advertise a hay wagon tour, barring extreme emergency ~and rain in the springtime is not an emergency~you should deliver this tour as advertised.
No, but it costs SOMEthing, and the way businesses make money is by cutting *all* expenditures that do not result in earning more than you've put out.Gravel? It doesn't take much to drive a drag over your ruts and spill a little gravel in the potholes...you can have it split into the actual tire tracks to save a little money. Gravel can last a very long time and it doesn't cost a mint.
Yeah but time spent weedwhacking is time NOT spent doing something of a profit-producing nature. Unless they spend time sitting around idle, which I have a hard time imagining <vbg>, time spent on one thing is time taken away from another thing.He has several apprentices who make $100 a month, room and board, who will make this money no matter what task he puts them to....
Yeah, well, if history (and observation of the world as it now is, too) shows us nothing else, it's that there are a whole lot of very different opinions on what it means to be a Christian ;>After all, the man professes to be a Christian, which in my book, holds one to a higher standard than the usual money-grubbing agribiz companies that he eschews. A Christian should be placing more importance on his fellow man and his witness towards them than his bottom line.
but all of those things DO increase productivity... keeping weeds down around buildings cuts down on parasites, varmints, and structural damage. i mean, get some goats to clean up those weeds... it's not hard. correctly graveling your thoroughfares keeps weeds and erosion down and puts less wear and tear on your vehicles. PLUS, it sure doesn't hurt to be convenient to the public when you are charging them $300/hr to come visit your farm. and why can't hay bales be covered in tarps on the wagon?patandchickens said:Paying someone to weedwhack, buying gravel for the convenience of the public, wasting hay (it may only take ten bales to do a rainy hayride *once*, but multiplied by the number of rainy days it can add up fast), or giving animals extra room to be happy if it does not increase their productivity... <shrug>
The question isn't whether it increases productivity, though...bibliophile birds said:but all of those things DO increase productivity... keeping weeds down around buildings cuts down on parasites, varmints, and structural damage. i mean, get some goats to clean up those weeds... it's not hard. correctly graveling your thoroughfares keeps weeds and erosion down and puts less wear and tear on your vehicles. PLUS, it sure doesn't hurt to be convenient to the public when you are charging them $300/hr to come visit your farm. and why can't hay bales be covered in tarps on the wagon?