My wife worked in the real estate section of an electrical utility and she told me you might want to talk with an attorney about what that electrical utility did to you with their power pole positioning. That is an easement issue and they should be held liable for rendering a portion of your land unusable. She dealt with issues like that on occasion. You tried in good faith to get them to make it right, so you might consider escalating it.
I thought for a second that Bob was using several workin words when he went silent 😂 and Bob, if you think utility companies are difficult to deal with, try oil companies,,,,, 🤬 I just realized I’ve been watchin you Brown boys for three years!
Property lines can be problematic at best. Gets frustrating when people build things right on the line and creep over on yours. Nice to see harvest and wheat planting moving along.
When people creep over the property line, destroy what's on your side. Sawzalls make quick work of most buildings 😎 Ask my old neighbors who thought they could overhang their new shed 3 feet onto my property.
Yeah I'd just put a measly little post fence with some barb wire between it. Cheap, effective, and lays out where the property line is. I guess it'd be hard to do if it's such a long distance, but I'd do it regardless to prevent stuff like this. We had a property dispute in the late 90's and we ended up gaining almost 10 inches of our neighbors property when the city came in. lol cuz they built a fence long ago, and maybe thats where the old old fence was I'm really not sure I was young, but either way, the fence we replaced it with, sits on the actual property line. It shrunk their sidewalk on side of their house by almost a foot. lol They were not happy, they sold the house and left within 3 months? 4 months? maybe half a year. Even tho all we did was get back our actual land which they stole from us by accident or on purpose? They never spoke another word to us, even tho, we just got what we originally paid for? It's crazy.
Thanks for another great video Brian. It was interesting. These cameras now days are pretty touchy about the settings and such. Good thing you discovered that audio setting. We all know you well enough we would have figured it out-ha!!! Congratulations on finishing your wheat seeding. Now you have it done-yea!!!!!! Now back to harvest time. Good thing your dad discovered that fence the neighbor put in without asking. If I understand right the fence is for sure over the property line. That much less you have to Farm. One of you will have to have a conversation with them. People. Know what you mean Bob about those big power line poles. We had some also. Heck of a mess farming around them. Oh boy. Beavers are very destructive animals. Can really mess with your water ways and streams and into your fields. Best to tear down those dams they build. Wow. Good video. Lots of good info and variety. Glad you got a good LP gas man. Important when dryer is running. Great. About it I guess Brian. Thanks for everything. You all take care and be safe. Thanks. The Iowa Farm Boy. Steve.
Dad cutting the neighbor's trees back for him, and the neighbor not liking them getting cut back was hilarious. Particularly the bit about getting the ripper out and ripping through the roots. Your dad's very practical about it, if it's on or under his property line, he'll rip through it.😂🤣👍👍
You can cut an overhanging branch.....BUT, if it can be shown that the tree died from that cutting then you're outta luck and are liable for damages. Pretty sure the same applies to root plowing on your ground
@@willbass2869 and if your trees are causing damage to the neighbor's property or vital infrastructure, you're liable for damage. Everyone knows that planting trees so close to the property line can be problematic and potentially costly, for both sides. Farmers tend not to do that. If they plant trees, it's for a reason and they pick the spot carefully, with the full knowledge that tree will get bigger and affect things around it. Grandpa was a farmer and I spent a couple years (early 1970's) living on the farm while my parents were getting divorced. It was an ugly divorce so we kids got to stay with grandma and grandpa until everything was settled. I loved it, my brother hated it. Anyway, I remember the stories told whenever his friends stopped by, every Sunday after church. Especially Earl, who wasn't religious, liked to gossip, and liked to cuss even more. Earl was always fun to listen to. One of Earl's stories was about a neighbor planting trees too close to his fenceline. He and grandpa both called him "City Boy" and it was clear that they didn't think much of him. Earl told him that he'd planted too close and City Boy said he'd planted them exactly where he wanted them. Then it was pointed out that the roots of those trees were gonna get hurt whenever the next field over was plowed. City Boy said "They're only little trees. It'll be years before they get that big. You can plow around the roots when they grow up." Earl knew that wasn't going to work very well and he couldn't really afford to leave parts of that field fallow. So he thought about it and realized that if he moved the irrigation ditch from the other side of the field to go along that fenceline instead he could not only recoup the lost planting area, he could deal with the fact that the trees would suck water out of his field too. It was a long, kinda skinny field and flat enough that it wouldn't make much difference if the ditch was on one side or the other. So he got approval from the water district on the plan and borrowed a trencher and a backhoe. He managed to get the new ditch almost finished before City Boy realized what was happening. They were installing the gates when he confronted Earl about it. Earl just gave a friendly smile and said "It was the water district's decision. Look at it this way, your trees are gonna get lots of water now." Those trees did indeed get lots of water and grew quickly... then the county told him to cut them down because they were damaging the canal.
@KeyClavis Actually you are incorrect, most times the tree owner is not liable for the damage a tree does on a neighboring property., unless it can be shown the owner of the tree know or was informed of future problems when planting the tree.
@KeyClavis Just because the county demands something doesn't mean you legally have to do. Governments regularly make questionable demands knowing people don't like to challenge them.
I agree pops they could have been nice people and moved it Great job on finishing the wheat, it is to bad it took so long but it’s great it’s done good job to you all!!
In my eyes it makes them look like jerks for 1 leaving the tree in the field, and 2 being so mean as they put the fence over the downed tree.. It would get under my skin fast if the tree fell and was left on my land. Farm land or just yard, that would not mater what the land was used for...
Enjoyed the Bob cam this video. He's pretty funny, hope he got Brian that bed mattress. BTW.. Like Bob said in general, taking a little on a fence line is ok but takeing and not asking is NOT! ASK first or suffer the cost to MOVE it.
It’s all fine seeing the corn the wheat the beans and your smiling face. But I really in joy seeing the countryside beaver dam’s brook’s other farms byways between fields Thanks. BFF
Cut all the roots that are growing on your land and those pines will be taken care of. Check on your local law regulating growth of trees and buildings located on the property lines. Here trees must be five meters distance and buildings 10 meters. Tree branches can not exit the owner’s property.
Great stuff. That yote sure didn’t seem bothered by the tractor. Might be a coydog cross. Land lines can be a messy thing. My Daddy always said our neighbor kept creeping the fence in on us over the years but never made an issue because it was wooded land with no significant value. About 20 years after he died a survey was done that proved he was right. In some places it was 45 yards off. Selfishness has always been with us, but the level and pervasiveness of it today is stunning compared to just 20 years or so. My way or the highway in just about anything.
the only issue with never making it an issue is after a certain time, depending on state law, the neighbor can them put in an adverse possession claim and win, thereby officially moving the property line for their gain.
Bob , you need to do a voice over when the audio goes out. Though I kid you about it, I appreciate all of your videos and hearing what you have to say. Thanks for sharing!
I know about having to manually lift up and down on short crops, i had to run our 1660 on 240ac of lentils that were about 6-8” tall with no autoheight this year because the macdon on our 7120 decided to blow up parts that aren’t available til beginning of december. That was a process i never want to do again. Love the videos
I heard Mornin at the top of the video, so I hit the like 👍 as usual. The rest of the video was top-notch as usual. Love this channel. Happy subscriber 😊!
I’ve had this problem. Two newer property owners bordering my property have tried to encroach, and both have given others permission to come on to my property. All of these things have turned me into the person those people don’t want me to be.
I hate when that happens, My neighbor always gives people permission to hunt in my woods. One good thing, I have made a lot of money selling tree stands, lol.
I like bob’s thinking they could have moved that damn tree they done took a big chunk with that fence you take 10 foot by 1000 foot or just 500 foot that is a good chunk of property they could have asked if they give you any lip fire up the 8 and clean it up lol and since they threw a fit for trimming the tree hook up the ripper make sure there no utilities in there get right against the tree and bury the ripper to the beam and go threw there that will take care of the tree for you then in a little while you might have to pick up the pieces but you want have to worry about them any more but great video as usual keep them coming and stay safe
Ripper use late autumn helps with destroying the roots which leave trees susceptible to high winds and fall in other directions away from the ripped ground.
What a wonderful deal being finished ✅ and set. Like when I sell all the Salmon from my Tote and it’s done. Time to fish again then sell another 60 Coho. God Bless you Brother Brian and your whole Family ❤️🖖🏼😏🇺🇸
happens all the time - check out the story in waterdown ontario - A local nursery tried to steal an old ladies farm they were the neighbor as their operation grew they kept moving their greenhouse operation farther onto her property she finally asked them to move they refused and they fought her in court they lost Connon nurseries..they felt since she was not using it they could take it
Pretty low act or lazy not moving that tree off your place. The big Cat will do a good job ripping down that fence line. We rip around our trees and it makes a huge difference, only lasts a few years. We have a granular product available in Australia call Graslan that turns forest into grassland if you know what I mean. Just sprinkle a bit along that fenceline, no more tree issue. May have a bigger neighbour issue though😂.
Brian…another great video. It brings back memories of drilling wheat in October, and fighting beavers in a creek a couple miles away from 140 acre field that would flood when the beavers build their dam.
If you leave corrugated tubing with a cap on one end laying around the beavers will build with them. Then all you got to do is wade out and remove the cap every now and then.
Bob, as you know, you own the air straight up from your fence, so you can legally trim the limbs that hang over your property. Not much you can do about the roots.
A trippy will cut the upper ones right off under ground might kill a few trees but will prevent neighbors trees from Robbing your soil nutrients and moisture as much
🔥eh bob, thx for taking cam with ya.. wat a bunch a dummies wow, build fence right over the dam tree lmao.. give ‘em hell bob. Doing great job planting Brian, really seems to be a nice planter🔥👊🔥⚙️🔨🏍🚜🌽
My friend's neighbor kept moving in on his land with crops every year. After 15 years he got his land surveyed and found out that the neighbor was using 1/2 his land. When my friend confronted him over it, the neighbor's reply was basicaly "deal with it". Had the neighbor been civil, my friend would have let him finish the crop year. But since he was a dick, my friend plowed the crop into the ground. The neighbor called the cops which told him the solution is to not plant crop on other people's land. But when the neighbor left, the cop told my friend that if the neighbor knew the rules he could have claimed the land as his own since he used it without complaints for so long.
@@Manoffire260 i'm not a lawyer, but i think where someonenis working the land that a timer begins and if they persist undiscovered, snatched up. They'll re-boundry the portiin of land in question...not the entire parcel
@@johnchornyTheOnly I have a property I inherited and lease out just one county east of the Browns, but I live more than two hours away. I had an adjoining land owner “borrow” about five acres and the farmer who leased my property didn’t notify me. Fortunately we did a new survey (I recommend every five or so years as it’s money well spent to verify). The “squatter” attempted an adverse possession and the judge threw it out for just those reasons - my relatives and myself had been paying the taxes on the parcel and it was not abandoned - just “confiscated”. That and a recent transfer (my inheritance) AND the fact I had a fresh survey to confirm my ownership. It’s not as easy as some would have you believe - just regularly watch your boundaries!
@@Manoffire260 it's that simple, that it's easily overlooked. Texas and florida had epidemics as The Smartest Guys In The Room threw banks holdings into chaos...squatters would move in while the file sat at a bank for years, et voila....maybe the bank is still on the hook for outstanding taxes beyond the incubatuin period. It's good work if you can get it.
Brian, are your crops behind any due to the smog this summer? I live north of you in Crawford County and the farmer that rents my dad’s ground says his beans and corn are about 2 weeks behind. Just wondering if you are experiencing that as well. Keep up the good content! Nice to see Ohio farmers on the tube!
Smoke from Canada is the best thing for canola in the western Canada because I refuse to be part of the LIberal socialist communist state of Trudeau that POS. we need a revolt. Anyway those fires up north are Trudeau made. guess why..? Elections are coming. Yeah i may be off the rocker with this idea,...same thing with Haweia
You can trim them if they’re on your property. I’m in Ohio too, and the farmer on the other side of our tree line did it. We don’t have a problem with it though.
Always enjoyable to watch your family do their thins, including you. I am not sure what I missed on the neighbors farming your land though. Is it the fence being moved over that downed tree?
@@BriansFarmingVideos If it is on your land... You always got the option to remove it any time you guys want to.... what they did is not a good way to keep a friendship with the folks who live around them.. Sorry they where jerks for not only leaving the tree in your field but putting that fence like that...
@@jonathanbair523I bet it would be satisfying to have surveyors come in and stake out the property line n then immediately tear out the neighbour's new fence while they watch.
Hello from Tennessee, LOVE your channel! Would you address something I have been wondering about in an upcoming video? In the past you have said the tall, skinnier tires work better in your operation. Now you have LSW on the Fendt, really makes the tractor look amazing! Is there an advantage? Are these tires a demo? Just wondering your thoughts? Thanks
I know I don’t feel like I’ve done my job moving equipment down the highway till I have a half mile of traffic piled up behind me. Everyone likes a parade!!! Lol 😆
Our neighbor a mile down down the road died in 90s the 20 acres on other side of creek his wife didn’t realize she owned got farmed by neighbor back behind her for free while she paid taxes on it with no field rental until she died in 2000.
Great Video Brian, 2-3 things, whas the "neighbours farming your fields, the pine trees or the beavers? I'm curious, the leason in buying a sony camera is you become mute! thanks for sharing
Beaver is less destructive than one realize, they retain stream water which prevents it from immediate drain off, and allows it time to replenish the water table. A simular scenario is the fella that made thousands of stone dams in his streams in New Mexico I believe turned his whole property green from desert.
Yes they are very good at making wetlands.....But there skills at making wet lands is bad for farming as it can kill the crops.... So land that can't really be worked would be good for the beavers as you said the can make the land green from desert. But open fields that needs to be watered the right amount or to much/to little water will stunt or kill the crops... In some cases in the right settings the beavers can be good, but in the wrong settings they can be bad... In case of flooding crops very bad and that can be 5-6 digest worth of loss if it is a full field.
You would be surprised how dark a 53' trailer gets up in the nose. That's why they always have lights. Maybe one of these weeks you will be done planting 🤣😉
My wife worked in the real estate section of an electrical utility and she told me you might want to talk with an attorney about what that electrical utility did to you with their power pole positioning. That is an easement issue and they should be held liable for rendering a portion of your land unusable. She dealt with issues like that on occasion. You tried in good faith to get them to make it right, so you might consider escalating it.
I thought for a second that Bob was using several workin words when he went silent 😂 and Bob, if you think utility companies are difficult to deal with, try oil companies,,,,, 🤬 I just realized I’ve been watchin you Brown boys for three years!
Property lines can be problematic at best. Gets frustrating when people build things right on the line and creep over on yours. Nice to see harvest and wheat planting moving along.
When people creep over the property line, destroy what's on your side. Sawzalls make quick work of most buildings 😎
Ask my old neighbors who thought they could overhang their new shed 3 feet onto my property.
Yeah I'd just put a measly little post fence with some barb wire between it. Cheap, effective, and lays out where the property line is. I guess it'd be hard to do if it's such a long distance, but I'd do it regardless to prevent stuff like this.
We had a property dispute in the late 90's and we ended up gaining almost 10 inches of our neighbors property when the city came in. lol cuz they built a fence long ago, and maybe thats where the old old fence was I'm really not sure I was young, but either way, the fence we replaced it with, sits on the actual property line.
It shrunk their sidewalk on side of their house by almost a foot. lol They were not happy, they sold the house and left within 3 months? 4 months? maybe half a year. Even tho all we did was get back our actual land which they stole from us by accident or on purpose? They never spoke another word to us, even tho, we just got what we originally paid for? It's crazy.
I love listening to Dad. He’s got it figured out man. Reminds me of my ole man.
Glad you talked with them about the fence some people would keep trying to take more and more if you let them lol thanks for sharing
Your not alone, power company decided to cut my fence and pull my corner posts to set a pole. Now I have some new fence and own a power pole.
Thanks for another great video Brian. It was interesting.
These cameras now days are pretty touchy about the settings and such. Good thing you discovered that audio setting. We all know you well enough we would have figured it out-ha!!!
Congratulations on finishing your wheat seeding. Now you have it done-yea!!!!!! Now back to harvest time.
Good thing your dad discovered that fence the neighbor put in without asking. If I understand right the fence is for sure over the property line. That much less you have to Farm. One of you will have to have a conversation with them. People.
Know what you mean Bob about those big power line poles. We had some also. Heck of a mess farming around them. Oh boy.
Beavers are very destructive animals. Can really mess with your water ways and streams and into your fields. Best to tear down those dams they build. Wow.
Good video. Lots of good info and variety.
Glad you got a good LP gas man. Important when dryer is running. Great.
About it I guess Brian. Thanks for everything. You all take care and be safe. Thanks.
The Iowa Farm Boy. Steve.
Dad cutting the neighbor's trees back for him, and the neighbor not liking them getting cut back was hilarious. Particularly the bit about getting the ripper out and ripping through the roots. Your dad's very practical about it, if it's on or under his property line, he'll rip through it.😂🤣👍👍
You can cut an overhanging branch.....BUT, if it can be shown that the tree died from that cutting then you're outta luck and are liable for damages. Pretty sure the same applies to root plowing on your ground
@@willbass2869 and if your trees are causing damage to the neighbor's property or vital infrastructure, you're liable for damage. Everyone knows that planting trees so close to the property line can be problematic and potentially costly, for both sides. Farmers tend not to do that. If they plant trees, it's for a reason and they pick the spot carefully, with the full knowledge that tree will get bigger and affect things around it.
Grandpa was a farmer and I spent a couple years (early 1970's) living on the farm while my parents were getting divorced. It was an ugly divorce so we kids got to stay with grandma and grandpa until everything was settled. I loved it, my brother hated it. Anyway, I remember the stories told whenever his friends stopped by, every Sunday after church. Especially Earl, who wasn't religious, liked to gossip, and liked to cuss even more. Earl was always fun to listen to.
One of Earl's stories was about a neighbor planting trees too close to his fenceline. He and grandpa both called him "City Boy" and it was clear that they didn't think much of him. Earl told him that he'd planted too close and City Boy said he'd planted them exactly where he wanted them. Then it was pointed out that the roots of those trees were gonna get hurt whenever the next field over was plowed. City Boy said "They're only little trees. It'll be years before they get that big. You can plow around the roots when they grow up." Earl knew that wasn't going to work very well and he couldn't really afford to leave parts of that field fallow. So he thought about it and realized that if he moved the irrigation ditch from the other side of the field to go along that fenceline instead he could not only recoup the lost planting area, he could deal with the fact that the trees would suck water out of his field too. It was a long, kinda skinny field and flat enough that it wouldn't make much difference if the ditch was on one side or the other. So he got approval from the water district on the plan and borrowed a trencher and a backhoe. He managed to get the new ditch almost finished before City Boy realized what was happening. They were installing the gates when he confronted Earl about it. Earl just gave a friendly smile and said "It was the water district's decision. Look at it this way, your trees are gonna get lots of water now."
Those trees did indeed get lots of water and grew quickly... then the county told him to cut them down because they were damaging the canal.
@KeyClavis Actually you are incorrect, most times the tree owner is not liable for the damage a tree does on a neighboring property., unless it can be shown the owner of the tree know or was informed of future problems when planting the tree.
@KeyClavis Just because the county demands something doesn't mean you legally have to do. Governments regularly make questionable demands knowing people don't like to challenge them.
Love your videos. I had the pleasure of hunting in Chillicothe County about 20 years ago. Beautiful country! And BIG deer! 🦌
Love listening to Bob. He always does a great job. Always great videos Brian.
I agree pops they could have been nice people and moved it
Great job on finishing the wheat, it is to bad it took so long but it’s great it’s done good job to you all!!
In my eyes it makes them look like jerks for 1 leaving the tree in the field, and 2 being so mean as they put the fence over the downed tree.. It would get under my skin fast if the tree fell and was left on my land. Farm land or just yard, that would not mater what the land was used for...
Bob is the man. Love listening to him. He tells it like it is. Just like listening to my uncle. In the 70s. He sure is a keeper
I like the idea of using the ripper on the pine tree roots. 💪💪
Enjoyed the Bob cam this video. He's pretty funny, hope he got Brian that bed mattress. BTW.. Like Bob said in general, taking a little on a fence line is ok but takeing and not asking is NOT! ASK first or suffer the cost to MOVE it.
I like the way you fellas roll along.
Brian knows a beaver when he sees one hahaha 😅😂😅😅
Always nice to be done planting
It’s all fine seeing the corn the wheat the beans and your smiling face. But I really in joy seeing the countryside beaver dam’s brook’s other farms byways between fields Thanks. BFF
Cut all the roots that are growing on your land and those pines will be taken care of. Check on your local law regulating growth of trees and buildings located on the property lines. Here trees must be five meters distance and buildings 10 meters. Tree branches can not exit the owner’s property.
Thanks for sharing your time with us
Enjoyed seeing how you get things done.
Great video guys! Those power lines are always aggravating.
Bob cam is always a treat!
Great stuff. That yote sure didn’t seem bothered by the tractor. Might be a coydog cross.
Land lines can be a messy thing. My Daddy always said our neighbor kept creeping the fence in on us over the years but never made an issue because it was wooded land with no significant value. About 20 years after he died a survey was done that proved he was right. In some places it was 45 yards off. Selfishness has always been with us, but the level and pervasiveness of it today is stunning compared to just 20 years or so. My way or the highway in just about anything.
the only issue with never making it an issue is after a certain time, depending on state law, the neighbor can them put in an adverse possession claim and win, thereby officially moving the property line for their gain.
Bob , you need to do a voice over when the audio goes out. Though I kid you about it, I appreciate all of your videos and hearing what you have to say. Thanks for sharing!
I know about having to manually lift up and down on short crops, i had to run our 1660 on 240ac of lentils that were about 6-8” tall with no autoheight this year because the macdon on our 7120 decided to blow up parts that aren’t available til beginning of december. That was a process i never want to do again. Love the videos
Not many decades ago, no combines had auto header height adjustment.
No combines were running 25-50 foot headers 45-50 years ago either. Maybe the odd one running a 24 foot
I love lentils. Thank you for feeding me!
I heard Mornin at the top of the video, so I hit the like 👍 as usual. The rest of the video was top-notch as usual. Love this channel. Happy subscriber 😊!
We have lots of parades in our farm area. Lots of time people have let me know that I’m number one in their book.
Glad you finally got done with wheat!
I’ve had this problem. Two newer property owners bordering my property have tried to encroach, and both have given others permission to come on to my property. All of these things have turned me into the person those people don’t want me to be.
I hate when that happens, My neighbor always gives people permission to hunt in my woods. One good thing, I have made a lot of money selling tree stands, lol.
Don’t be too sure your neighbor gave trespassers permission. Trespassers lie.
@@user-xk4vt9ye8j Well, the few people I have caught in there had permission slips signed by my neighbors.
The new camera is noticably sharper,it can't be cheap. I,for one, really appreciate the effort. Love watching this stuff. Thanks.
It wasn’t but i love the quality it puts out when the sound works
I like bob’s thinking they could have moved that damn tree they done took a big chunk with that fence you take 10 foot by 1000 foot or just 500 foot that is a good chunk of property they could have asked if they give you any lip fire up the 8 and clean it up lol and since they threw a fit for trimming the tree hook up the ripper make sure there no utilities in there get right against the tree and bury the ripper to the beam and go threw there that will take care of the tree for you then in a little while you might have to pick up the pieces but you want have to worry about them any more but great video as usual keep them coming and stay safe
Ripper use late autumn helps with destroying the roots which leave trees susceptible to high winds and fall in other directions away from the ripped ground.
First time watching love it great content nice to see the small fields like are around me all small and cut up
Potomac Edison guys here are great. They go out of their way to help a farmer knowing there are times we can make their job easier. Guess we’re lucky!
I love the half doz posi burnouts on the the one lane country road 🤣
What a wonderful deal being finished ✅ and set. Like when I sell all the Salmon from my Tote and it’s done. Time to fish again then sell another 60 Coho. God Bless you Brother Brian and your whole Family ❤️🖖🏼😏🇺🇸
happens all the time - check out the story in waterdown ontario - A local nursery tried to steal an old ladies farm they were the neighbor as their operation grew they kept moving their greenhouse operation farther onto her property she finally asked them to move they refused and they fought her in court they lost Connon nurseries..they felt since she was not using it they could take it
Try some Tannerite on the beaver dam. Could make another great video!
Always good to have planting done.
It sounds like the neighbors wife needs her bush trimmed more often. 😂 And yes it’s time to get rid of the beaver.
Now that’s funny😂
Pretty low act or lazy not moving that tree off your place. The big Cat will do a good job ripping down that fence line. We rip around our trees and it makes a huge difference, only lasts a few years. We have a granular product available in Australia call Graslan that turns forest into grassland if you know what I mean. Just sprinkle a bit along that fenceline, no more tree issue. May have a bigger neighbour issue though😂.
Brian…another great video. It brings back memories of drilling wheat in October, and fighting beavers in a creek a couple miles away from 140 acre field that would flood when the beavers build their dam.
Whew. Sounds terrible and wonderful at the same time
The shaved beavers are the funnest to wrestle with.
If you leave corrugated tubing with a cap on one end laying around the beavers will build with them. Then all you got to do is wade out and remove the cap every now and then.
D-8 will take care of that goat fence!
Bob, as you know, you own the air straight up from your fence, so you can legally trim the limbs that hang over your property. Not much you can do about the roots.
A trippy will cut the upper ones right off under ground might kill a few trees but will prevent neighbors trees from Robbing your soil nutrients and moisture as much
Bob brown tree service if we can’t trim it with the hoe we’ll rip the roots out 😂
🔥eh bob, thx for taking cam with ya.. wat a bunch a dummies wow, build fence right over the dam tree lmao.. give ‘em hell bob. Doing great job planting Brian, really seems to be a nice planter🔥👊🔥⚙️🔨🏍🚜🌽
Thank you for making great videos!!
I always kept a ratty old 22 mag in the cab with me. Them stupid coyotes weren't at all afraid of a tractor or combine and they paid dearly for it🤣
My friend's neighbor kept moving in on his land with crops every year. After 15 years he got his land surveyed and found out that the neighbor was using 1/2 his land. When my friend confronted him over it, the neighbor's reply was basicaly "deal with it".
Had the neighbor been civil, my friend would have let him finish the crop year. But since he was a dick, my friend plowed the crop into the ground.
The neighbor called the cops which told him the solution is to not plant crop on other people's land. But when the neighbor left, the cop told my friend that if the neighbor knew the rules he could have claimed the land as his own since he used it without complaints for so long.
Only if both parties had a common acceptance of the wrong property line.
In most states, adverse possession requires paying ther property taxes.
It's good that you discover it before they had the Right to transfer Land Title to themselves #AdversePossession
Usually in Ohio, that means the “squatters” need to be paying the property taxes, and/or that the land was “abandoned”
@@Manoffire260 i'm not a lawyer, but i think where someonenis working the land that a timer begins and if they persist undiscovered, snatched up. They'll re-boundry the portiin of land in question...not the entire parcel
@@johnchornyTheOnly I have a property I inherited and lease out just one county east of the Browns, but I live more than two hours away. I had an adjoining land owner “borrow” about five acres and the farmer who leased my property didn’t notify me. Fortunately we did a new survey (I recommend every five or so years as it’s money well spent to verify). The “squatter” attempted an adverse possession and the judge threw it out for just those reasons - my relatives and myself had been paying the taxes on the parcel and it was not abandoned - just “confiscated”. That and a recent transfer (my inheritance) AND the fact I had a fresh survey to confirm my ownership. It’s not as easy as some would have you believe - just regularly watch your boundaries!
There’s a timeframe for Ohio. It’s like 15-20 yrs and then it can be taken if it was used in such way that should have been known and continuously.
@@Manoffire260 it's that simple, that it's easily overlooked. Texas and florida had epidemics as The Smartest Guys In The Room threw banks holdings into chaos...squatters would move in while the file sat at a bank for years, et voila....maybe the bank is still on the hook for outstanding taxes beyond the incubatuin period. It's good work if you can get it.
Thanks for the crop! I knew that ford 9n would pay for itself someday!
Good luck combining beans Bob
very nice silent movie at the end. lol. great video and job guys
I’m lovin the shop
Clear video though!
It was Bobs Audio in the Beginning that I missed. Always enjoy when he gets the Camera and Spits Out his Mini-Appalachia Tongue Commentary/Wisdom!
Great video Brian
Yes ripper them roots I like it
Brian, are your crops behind any due to the smog this summer? I live north of you in Crawford County and the farmer that rents my dad’s ground says his beans and corn are about 2 weeks behind. Just wondering if you are experiencing that as well. Keep up the good content! Nice to see Ohio farmers on the tube!
Smoke from Canada is the best thing for canola in the western Canada because I refuse to be part of the LIberal socialist communist state of Trudeau that POS. we need a revolt. Anyway those fires up north are Trudeau made. guess why..? Elections are coming. Yeah i may be off the rocker with this idea,...same thing with Haweia
Set the neighbors straight fast!
And the beavers too🤙
I have neighbours with pine trees too! Seems they're all the same Bob 😂
Bob's the best 👍
You can trim them if they’re on your property. I’m in Ohio too, and the farmer on the other side of our tree line did it. We don’t have a problem with it though.
Like the ripper idea. Get the MASTER PIPE LAYER to lay down a line.
Good Video
I make hay in the PA mountains and most of my fields are odd shaped. Not ideal but an acre is an acre
Good fence makes good neighbors, I believe you can go across the fence on the "neighbor" to keep the fence line CLEAR.
Glad you got a little rain today. And more coming!
Bob is the man. His wife came out and give me all sorts of #### 😂
Lol, don’t tell Kayla about that mattress, she will have Brian sleeping in the shop!
No better feeling in the world than when the last of the crop is in the ground.
Thanks for the video .
They should have used Flex Seal to fix the bin. I've seen a guy make a boat out of a screen door with that stuff.
Great content thanks for letting us tag along!
Always enjoyable to watch your family do their thins, including you. I am not sure what I missed on the neighbors farming your land though. Is it the fence being moved over that downed tree?
Them building fence over the line
@@BriansFarmingVideos If it is on your land... You always got the option to remove it any time you guys want to.... what they did is not a good way to keep a friendship with the folks who live around them.. Sorry they where jerks for not only leaving the tree in your field but putting that fence like that...
@@jonathanbair523I bet it would be satisfying to have surveyors come in and stake out the property line n then immediately tear out the neighbour's new fence while they watch.
Love farming videos and Brian go to sleep .
Hello from Tennessee, LOVE your channel! Would you address something I have been wondering about in an upcoming video?
In the past you have said the tall, skinnier tires work better in your operation. Now you have LSW on the Fendt, really makes the tractor look amazing! Is there an advantage? Are these tires a demo? Just wondering your thoughts? Thanks
Like your drag strip. When's the Corn Field Nationals ? Lol
I know I don’t feel like I’ve done my job moving equipment down the highway till I have a half mile of traffic piled up behind me. Everyone likes a parade!!! Lol 😆
Not sure id be proud of that. I get it, do what ya gotta do.... But bragging about it... Well... Heres hopin your neighbors dont notice this...
@@Rumblestrip like I give a f#ck. Lol 😆
Our neighbor a mile down down the road died in 90s the 20 acres on other side of creek his wife didn’t realize she owned got farmed by neighbor back behind her for free while she paid taxes on it with no field rental until she died in 2000.
Keep up the good .
Work!
Never see Master Pipe Layer on Zach’s videos anymore! Tell Randy Hi!
The beavers are just doing what beavers have always done. They are not the destructive ones.
Great Video Brian, 2-3 things, whas the "neighbours farming your fields, the pine trees or the beavers? I'm curious, the leason in buying a sony camera is you become mute! thanks for sharing
Beaver is less destructive than one realize, they retain stream water which prevents it from immediate drain off, and allows it time to replenish the water table. A simular scenario is the fella that made thousands of stone dams in his streams in New Mexico I believe turned his whole property green from desert.
you dont have nc beavers or ohio ones
U funny and don't know much
Yes they are very good at making wetlands.....But there skills at making wet lands is bad for farming as it can kill the crops.... So land that can't really be worked would be good for the beavers as you said the can make the land green from desert. But open fields that needs to be watered the right amount or to much/to little water will stunt or kill the crops... In some cases in the right settings the beavers can be good, but in the wrong settings they can be bad... In case of flooding crops very bad and that can be 5-6 digest worth of loss if it is a full field.
A lot breaking on the gleaner
Good luck planting your wht Brian
2:32 wait a min... his deer stand ain't 200yards away from that is he??? tha would b!$%%&^endOFline........
Trees love Copper nails Bob.
Good show
2nd Amendment. SHAL NOT BE INFRINGED! I get it! From a VERY extraordinarily REAL TRUTH Researched, Trained and Educated Canadian!
Love a Bob Cam.
Bob is naïve. Someone did not lose their mattress. They dumped it.
Awesome! Wheat is in!
That's one high-quality camera!! Too bad it screws up the audio. You have to love technology....
Looks like burnout alley on that road Bob was on!!!
You would be surprised how dark a 53' trailer gets up in the nose. That's why they always have lights.
Maybe one of these weeks you will be done planting 🤣😉
Very good Video 👍 👍