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James T

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Posts posted by James T

  1. Interesting story and I think it's valid to post such here.

    I also think that there are some buyers who are up to tricks as well.  Ages ago I sent a UH item via Royal Mail which although not in a box was well packaged with newspaper, brown paper and bubblewrap (which another seller referred to as 'bomb-proof'!) and lo-and-behold it arrived with something (minor) broken.  He then contacted me to get a partial refund.  Then contacted me again later when he found something else broken...  I reduced the item to half the price with a partial refund.  There could well be people at this to reduce the price of an item, knowing that accepting a return is a bit of a pain for the seller - I specified no returns in my ad.  Something just didn't 'sit well' with this guy.

  2. trailed versions were Willy pheasants i seem to remember them with tines for rowing up windrows. there were two versions of trailed machines ,first version could handle two 5ft swaths  and the bigger version two 6ft swaths-i have brochures for them both.remember loads of them in my youth. nicholsons robin hood tedders had swathing doors as did bamfords big wuffler which looked like lely Willy pheasant and handled two 5ft swaths- of course the original wuffler was a one row machine with swath doors. nigel how effective at picking up was the vicon fan-ted ???.

    Any chance of you putting up the brochures on the board at some point, Nick?  Would love a look!  :)

  3. Is that upland were the guy is farming?

    Nice pictures.

    No, it's actually a few metres above sea-level.  The area is known as The Carse [low-lying ground] Of Stirling.  Thousands of years ago, there was an earthquake off Norway which sent a tsunami across the North Sea and flooded this area.  Very fertile land.

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    You may wonder where I've been hiding, but this is the first Lely Golden Pheasant I've seen working in 25 years!  I still have many fond memories of seeing one in a small field near my house which was the closest I could get to farm machinery in the town I stayed in.  I still have fond memories of seeing it at work. 

    Now for a Hayzip:

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    The PTO shaft must have fallen off this one  ;)

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  5. From a field nearby to the action for the set taken entitled 'Mowing In Stirlingshire', here's some tedding and baling action, featuring another Valmet.  This was the last field the guys were baling, and luckily they got it all done yesterday as the general area has had over an inch of rain today!

    Braes of Doune windfarm and the village of Thornhill can be seen in some shots.  The area is directly beside Flanders Moss National Nature Reserve.  As well as a Red Kite, I also saw a wing-tagged Buzzard, part of a study scheme looking at dispersal of young birds in Central Scotland.

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  6. Very nice pictures James, unusual wee Valtra there too. What hills are in the background are they the Ochils or Fintrays?

    Cheers!  That's the Gargunnock Hills.  Nice parallel crags in that part of the range.

  7. The grass is Meadow Foxtail also sometimes known as Common Foxtail..........nice pictures all the same  ;) ;) :D :D

    Cheers robbo - just consulted Collins Pocket Guide to  'Grasses, Sedges, Rushes & Ferns of Britain And Northern Europe' (an infrequently consulted tome in my natural history library I have to say  ;) ) and there it is.  Is it just used for feed/bedding?

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