Yes sir as a former trk driver that has backed up singles & double trailers I can appreciate the expertise & he done it with horses !! That was truly amazing & the skill level is astounding!! I thought he was actually gonna back in most of the way then as he said push it back by hand....He played us for he had FULL intention of not doing it by hand.."WELL DONE & PLAYED JIM"
Jim, Brenda & William, I always enjoy your videos. Also glad to see William feeling more comfortable around you and the camera. He is a fine young man, and seems to be a good, respectable, hard working employee, who takes instructions well, and is very good around the horses. I hope to see more of William. Wishing you all a pleasant day.
Good video! Yes, please, do some sawmill videos! It's soothing and relaxing to see you and William working. Thanks for sharing about William's horses, they are beautiful!
Doing a great job all round. Since you have William working with you and Brenda, it seems you are showing more and more. Keep it up Jim and thank you for showing your working days.
Jim what a great demonstration of backing the wagon attached to your 2 wheeled cart. Which takes a steady team like Ken and Lady and a skilled teamster like yourself It' takes a lot of practice and time to accomplish the task. Brenda is doing a wonderful job grooming the horses and feeding the stock. It's wonderful to watch William fitting in so well on the farm and sawmill .
I have my doubts with Skippy? I was with you the day you went to Skippys parents home and his mother was running around the horses just like Skippy. If one of the horses would give him a kick (but not to hard) it might cure him? At any rate I really like seeing what Skippys up to now!
Watching that backing up of the wagon, I was sitting here, trying to figure out what direction the horses needed to go to get the wagon in, and whatever I would think, “oh, they need to ‘gee’ now” Jim would yell “ha”!
Good afternoon to all at WHWJ. Having personally backed up wagons with steering front ends with tractors for years, I can attest to how challenging that was with the team! My father was the best I ever saw at doing it. Thanks for sharing your experience.
Love this video Jim..what ever you and Brenda film is great to see your life on a farm. Skippy is doing better with the cows as was not barking at them while they were eating. God bless you Jim Brenda and William as stay safe in those strong winds.🙏❤️❤️❤️
I really enjoy the mix of the things you do, logging, farming, farm chores, and sawmill work. The past few months have been somewhat deficient in sawmill work, so it's good to see it.
Hi all! Love all the videos, no matter what the content. Brenda there was a previous post about what you eat for lunch during the day. I know how busy you are with feeding, brushing, helping with the farm work and filming, but if possible would you please share some of your cooking/baking videos again? Have a blessed day 😊
My dad was a farmer growing up and had a big garden that he used mules to pull the plows. I remember him telling them hah and gee too 50+ years ago. I love watching your horses. Greetings from Sweet Home Alabama in the US.
Thank you Jim Brenda and William. I like the saw mill videos. I did some work at a saw mill. The man had a diesel engine on a big circular blade He started the diesel with a water turbine under the floor.❤❤❤.
Brenda, I am rather curious what you prepare for these fellows for dinner (the noon meal). As a very busy farm wife, do you use a crackpot or instant? I am always interested to know about regional foods and hearty meals. As a former farm kid, I remember what my mom and I used to cook. But times have changed. To answer Jim's question, yes, I enjoy seeing the sawmill work and will watch whatever he shares. A good day to you, Jim, and William. 😊😊😊
For someone who realizes how difficult backing a hay trailer in a barn is that was awesome. We used cotton trailers for square bale hay and used a 4-wheel drive truck with a drop pin hitch welded to front bumper to push trailer in the barn. Nice job!
Good video. 👌🏼Awesome job of backing up👏👍🏼👌🏼. Sure is a plus having them knowing the words Gee and Haw🙌🏼 Nice to see Willam’s horse get along with the pigs, a rare site…nice company for him👍🏼 Looking forward in seeing Willam and his horse hooked up and go for a ride with him🤠🇨🇦
Jim, I love the videos!!!!!!! I’m talking from experience and saying “Do as I Say and not as I Do!!!! HEARING PROTECTION IS A MUST AROUND EDGER AND SAWMILL!!!!
Willam is wearing , ear protection and leather leg protection apron. So that's a start . Jim is a work in progress. Practices safety in the forest, maybe more in the saw mill .😊😊😊
Backing a wagon was the hardest job that I ever did on the farm. We put hitches on the front of the tractor that made it much easier. I can't even imagine trying it with a team and cart. God bless and keep safe.
I enjoy sawmill videos. I worked with a Woodmiser and a Lane #1 with a 56-inch wheel saw. I originally found your channel because I used to work in the woods in New Hampshire with oxen.
I’ve got a neighbor who is great at backing a 4 wheel wagon, it’s a real skill! I’m just learning with a tractor…. Can’t do it at all with a truck. You did great with the horses!
I really enjoy watching the sawmill in action. I actually like about everything you show on here. The logging, farming, sawmill and the everyday life. Thanks for another good video. Have a blessed day.
Great video Jim nice to see other events/jobs on the farm. and more wood related videos woujd be nice for a change of pace. for us "Regular viewers. thanks for sharing. ECF
beautiful wood,,and looks like pigs are growing super Brenda, you're looking great,so glad you're feeling better to be able to video things. hope no big trees came down in the cabin. we heard about the winds on the news..
Wow lady looks pregnant. She looks so much bigger then she did with Bree at the same time. I like seeing the saw mill but, what I think is William really enjoys working in the saw mill. The pigs are doing really good and growing. All your videos are very pleasurable and informing. Thank you for sharing.
I love it when you mix it up. I don’t know how I missed the pigs this year, I must have missed a video. Yes more sawmill in the videos. Always watching from Panama City Florida, USA. 🇺🇸🦅
You have built a nice spread . Its been unseasonably mild in utah . We are having a wind storm , sixty miles or so gusty .been almost twenty-four huos . Thankyou . Skippy is growing too.
Great videos this week!! I really appreciate how well your horses are groomed. Your haircuts really make them look great. Watch another video on horse logging. Well trained and strong horses but it looked like they were never groomed and never clipped. Hair in their eyes, mane and tails shaggy. I really appreciated the grooming and care you and Brenda give your horses.
Watching Jim run edge the sawed lumber though the edger.Brought back memories of the days when I worked in a sawmill in Northern Wisconsin. I worked in the plaining mill.
It's obvious that William has been brought up around an Amish mentor who has helped develop his carpentry skills and hard work ethics. Working together as a team is essential to accomplish the job
I was wondering about Skippy's breeding, and he certainly behaves like a heeler. Australian Blue Heeler was bred to work cattle, to move them by biting heels. No idea what else is in him but looks like kelpie, a herding dog also Aussie, that makes a wide cast and brings stock to you. Anyway, interesting that he feels drawn to the cattle. Purebred heeler is blue speckled, often tri-colour head, often with black patches. Good with children, can be ferocious guard dogs, prone to overweight as a house dog in town, they like space and can run all day, as Skippy can. Good vid as always, love to go for a jaunt up the road in William's buggy! Amish horses do get along right sprightly!
I enjoy most everything you do on the farm and in the woods. Has Abby gotten the rest of the wood for her porch floor? Her place is coming along fantastically, but it won't be long before she's had it with the mudding and taping and sanding. That tends to get old fast!
man....Alexa and her dad of their yt channel explained so wonderfully about horses (animals period) and the importance of them being outside and him not having a barn for his horses..man he has 8 beautiful horses.. I really like this video today...but; shoot I like em all......lov from south alabama.
We live on coast of North Carolina. You should watch boats with twin diesel engines come to full stop and with one swift move back into slip with ease which requires alot of experience to make look easy.I understand the challenge of backing two wheel and four wheel carts having worked on farm in my youth.
I like. sawmill video When I was young my Dad logged with horses and ran a sawmill. I started working in the mill when I was twelve and started sawing at fifteen. watching you work in the woods a d sawing hits home with Me.
I think skippy puts himself in some dangerous situations but he seems smart and alert too at the same time, I believe he’ll be a great farm dog 💙 he’s still a pup I’m guessing? love your videos.
I tried to back up a small trailer with a car & couldn't!! Lol!! I only did it one time...I think, with practice I'd get better! But. With horses?? I don't know!! 😂 It seems to me the pigs don't have much room! Not much of a life! 😕 🤷♀️ That lumber is beautiful! Wow! I work at a Menards ( like Home Depot) & I NEVER see lumber this nice! William works hard! How in the world did you do all this yourself??!! This was a great video!! 😁
Around the 1:15 mark, Jim says that he hopes the audio is working good today. It was perfect timing on Ken's part, as he let a big fart go. Yep, audio is working fine Jim!!!
You bring back lots of memories of my grampa and dad using grampa,s two horses to make hay by hand from cutting to hauling and making haycocks to pulling logs for lumber and firewood
Those sliding tongues...I sure wish I had them! I was backing 4 abreast the other day up to a disc with the wheels kind of sunk into the mud from where I parked it last fall, oh my word trying to get the drawbar lined up lol, Get it almost perfect then someone takes a half a step forward or back. the disc not willing to budge either. Took a few minutes. The workshops and lessons I teach backing is the most counter intuitive skill I teach, and I leave it till they get a good feel for the lines moving forwards.
Hi Jim and Brenda, hope you're all doing well. Something ive been wondering is have you considered getting another Percheron to make a heavy team? Also loving seeing Skippy, he's such a cutey.
I believe he likes the suffolks because they’re easier to harness (not so tall). Easier as age creeps up on you. But I agree, a pair of black Percherons is gorgeous!
LOL I like you Jim find it hard to back up a hay wagon (2axles) . I worked for a farmer who would have 2 wagons hooked together and back them both into the barn at once. I tried many times and many fails.
4H tractor rodeos we had when I was a kid one of the events was backing four wheel hay wagons around a course of cones. Try it with 2 hay wagons. Can say I have never had a life situation where that skill was needed!
I love and enjoy all your videos. It’s fun to see the animals and how they are fairing but I seem to think Lady looks a bit larger than she did with Bree at this stage but I could be wrong. If this is the case does this suggest she is carrying a colt this go round and not a filly? Just my observation is all and I know camera angles can make things seem larger and smaller, like rear view mirrors I guess!😉 I know it’s a power of suggestion thing but I swear I could smell the wood as you were edging it. It was a heavenly smell…in my mind. I am looking forward to more gardening and greenhouse visits and farming sessions when the weather turns but then I will miss logging and that’s why it’s good you mix up your content. As most of your subscribers probably are I am getting giddy for foaling day!!! Lady just keeps us focused on her special day every time I see her. I have to mention how much fun it is for me to see William working at the farm, I buy a lot of my canning and summer eating produce from an Amish family so it’s always a treat to learn new things about the their culture. Hope we do get an up close and personal lesson about their mode of transportation. I guess this is a deep rabbit hole chase just to let you know that yes I do like all your various content subjects. By the way…I enjoy barber day on the farm too Jim!!!:):):)
Yes sir as a former trk driver that has backed up singles & double trailers I can appreciate the expertise & he done it with horses !! That was truly amazing & the skill level is astounding!!
I thought he was actually gonna back in most of the way then as he said push it back by hand....He played us for he had FULL intention of not doing it by hand.."WELL DONE & PLAYED JIM"
Sound is very good even with the wind.
Jim, Brenda & William, I always enjoy your videos. Also glad to see William feeling more comfortable around you and the camera. He is a fine young man, and seems to be a good, respectable, hard working employee, who takes instructions well, and is very good around the horses. I hope to see more of William. Wishing you all a pleasant day.
Good video! Yes, please, do some sawmill videos! It's soothing and relaxing to see you and William working. Thanks for sharing about William's horses, they are beautiful!
Watching wood being milled is so satisfying.
Doing a great job all round. Since you have William working with you and Brenda, it seems you are showing more and more. Keep it up Jim and thank you for showing your working days.
The philosophy using the sawmill is always interesting. Especially flat sawn vs quarter sawn.
Like to see William's horse and buggy!!
Jim what a great demonstration of backing the wagon attached to your 2 wheeled cart. Which takes a steady team like Ken and Lady and a skilled teamster like yourself It' takes a lot of practice and time to accomplish the task. Brenda is doing a wonderful job grooming the horses and feeding the stock. It's wonderful to watch William fitting in so well on the farm and sawmill .
Always enjoy seeing Jim and Brenda the horses and thanks for showing the pigs and the cattle
I just love Skippy. A cute dog without a care in the world.
Jim was just showing off how well trained and responsive his team's are including Brenda & William Skippy still a work in progress 👏 😊
I have my doubts with Skippy? I was with you the day you went to Skippys parents home and his mother was running around the horses just like Skippy. If one of the horses would give him a kick (but not to hard) it might cure him? At any rate I really like seeing what Skippys up to now!
Watching that backing up of the wagon, I was sitting here, trying to figure out what direction the horses needed to go to get the wagon in, and whatever I would think, “oh, they need to ‘gee’ now” Jim would yell “ha”!
Dancing Horses with Jim 🤗. Great Job!
Those horses are saints for having patience with Jim
Amazing to watch how Jim and these horses just a word and they respond. He does so many dif chores and gets all the work done. Keep on farmin'
Yes the horses have patience with Jim but Jim’s patience with the horses is amazing!
It’s team work, and skill full.
Do the pigs have a clean place if they decide to lay down?
@@philippamediwake1235Pigs are not particular about their beds !
Good afternoon to all at WHWJ. Having personally backed up wagons with steering front ends with tractors for years, I can attest to how challenging that was with the team! My father was the best I ever saw at doing it. Thanks for sharing your experience.
Love this video Jim..what ever you and Brenda film is great to see your life on a farm. Skippy is doing better with the cows as was not barking at them while they were eating. God bless you Jim Brenda and William as stay safe in those strong winds.🙏❤️❤️❤️
Love to see horses work. I Would Like To See Williams buggy and horse
God bless ❤❤
Sawmill videos are always good…brings back a lot of childhood memories for sure. God bless.
I really enjoy the mix of the things you do, logging, farming, farm chores, and sawmill work. The past few months have been somewhat deficient in sawmill work, so it's good to see it.
Hi all! Love all the videos, no matter what the content. Brenda there was a previous post about what you eat for lunch during the day. I know how busy you are with feeding, brushing, helping with the farm work and filming, but if possible would you please share some of your cooking/baking videos again? Have a blessed day 😊
My dad was a farmer growing up and had a big garden that he used mules to pull the plows. I remember him telling them hah and gee too 50+ years ago. I love watching your horses. Greetings from Sweet Home Alabama in the US.
Beside being educational & informational the videos are entertaining.
Thank you Jim Brenda and William. I like the saw mill videos. I did some work at a saw mill. The man had a diesel engine on a big circular blade
He started the diesel with a water turbine under the floor.❤❤❤.
William is such a blessing. 😊😊🙏🙏
Brenda, I am rather curious what you prepare for these fellows for dinner (the noon meal). As a very busy farm wife, do you use a crackpot or instant? I am always interested to know about regional foods and hearty meals. As a former farm kid, I remember what my mom and I used to cook. But times have changed. To answer Jim's question, yes, I enjoy seeing the sawmill work and will watch whatever he shares. A good day to you, Jim, and William. 😊😊😊
For someone who realizes how difficult backing a hay trailer in a barn is that was awesome. We used cotton trailers for square bale hay and used a 4-wheel drive truck with a drop pin hitch welded to front bumper to push trailer in the barn. Nice job!
I LOVE ❤ your lumber. Can't wait for smellevision.😅 ❤ love your mill.area too. awesome work Jim & Wm.. I could watch happy 4 hrs ❤😊
Great mix in.this video...
Always a pleasure to see...
Blessings ❤
You have a fine operation going Jim and Brenda. Kinda looks like Jim catching up. Nice to have friends drop in even though they weren't staying
Good video. 👌🏼Awesome job of backing up👏👍🏼👌🏼. Sure is a plus having them knowing the words Gee and Haw🙌🏼 Nice to see Willam’s horse get along with the pigs, a rare site…nice company for him👍🏼 Looking forward in seeing Willam and his horse hooked up and go for a ride with him🤠🇨🇦
Thank you for sharing Brenda and Jim. 🐴🐴
Hi, Jim and Brenda. I do enjoy watching all your videos. I especially like the sawmill videos😊
Ken and Lady,,I love that pair.. also a great photo at 15:42...for the nx.calendar..😊
Nice to see that someone still knows how to do something properly I skidded with a gray mare and dad would be shouting orders good work
Jim, I love the videos!!!!!!! I’m talking from experience and saying “Do as I Say and not as I Do!!!! HEARING PROTECTION IS A MUST AROUND EDGER AND SAWMILL!!!!
AND EYE 👁️ PROTECTION!!!
Willam is wearing , ear protection and leather leg protection apron. So that's a start . Jim is a work in progress. Practices safety in the forest, maybe more in the saw mill .😊😊😊
Jim, that was an enjoyable video. Your backing skills are impressive. William seems to fit in very well with your family.
you are fortunate to have a helper like William and cooperative wife Like Brenda. Yes I like your sawmill videos. I watch all your videos.
Backing a wagon was the hardest job that I ever did on the farm. We put hitches on the front of the tractor that made it much easier. I can't even imagine trying it with a team and cart. God bless and keep safe.
I enjoy sawmill videos.
I worked with a Woodmiser and a Lane #1 with a 56-inch wheel saw.
I originally found your channel because I used to work in the woods in New Hampshire with oxen.
I’ve got a neighbor who is great at backing a 4 wheel wagon, it’s a real skill! I’m just learning with a tractor…. Can’t do it at all with a truck. You did great with the horses!
👍 Yes we want more saw milling
Jim the wagon master we are amazed.
Great job backing in the shed. It is extremely difficult.
I really enjoy watching the sawmill in action. I actually like about everything you show on here. The logging, farming, sawmill and the everyday life.
Thanks for another good video. Have a blessed day.
Great video Jim nice to see other events/jobs on the farm. and more wood related videos woujd be nice for a change of pace. for us "Regular viewers. thanks for sharing. ECF
Yes like the sawmill videos
beautiful wood,,and looks like pigs are growing super
Brenda,
you're looking great,so glad you're feeling better
to be able to video things.
hope no big trees came down in the cabin. we heard about the winds on the news..
Really enjoy seeing the end product of your labors in the woods.
Wow lady looks pregnant. She looks so much bigger then she did with Bree at the same time.
I like seeing the saw mill but, what I think is William really enjoys working in the saw mill.
The pigs are doing really good and growing.
All your videos are very pleasurable and informing. Thank you for sharing.
I am so impressed by all your great videos
Love saw the mill and manure.videos. My two favorites.
I love it when you mix it up. I don’t know how I missed the pigs this year, I must have missed a video. Yes more sawmill in the videos. Always watching from Panama City Florida, USA. 🇺🇸🦅
your house looks so good with the new shutters...what a interesting video you guys put out today...varied and great to watch.
I really enjoy all that you show and especially a variety like this one. I have wanted to see the cows and pigs for some time now. Thanks
Always like the sawmill vids.😊😊😊
You have built a nice spread .
Its been unseasonably mild in utah .
We are having a wind storm , sixty miles or so gusty .been almost twenty-four huos .
Thankyou .
Skippy is growing too.
EARL!
Love your videos horses and sawmill
What a great team of horses
I would have had to use the skid steer and pushed it in! Well done , sir!
Great videos this week!! I really appreciate how well your horses are groomed. Your haircuts really make them look great.
Watch another video on horse logging. Well trained and strong horses but it looked like they were never groomed and never clipped. Hair in their eyes, mane and tails shaggy.
I really appreciated the grooming and care you and Brenda give your horses.
love the sawmill division of your operation
Saw milling is soothing. Wish you could show us a little on how that edger works. Enjoy all your videos.
Love hearing about the animals. Reminds me of my childhood 😃 would be in my element to spend some time on your farm!
Whitefield Maine has lots of Amish Vehicles on the road.
Hello from Brunswick, Maine, US....
Watching Jim run edge the sawed lumber though the edger.Brought back memories of the days when I worked in a sawmill in Northern Wisconsin. I worked in the plaining mill.
Can almost smell the wood from the saw. Wood and leather smell so good. Thank you!
🧐 nice to see the variety chores, farming,logging, working horses, Jim/Brenda 👍👋
I would say William is getting a lot of good experience learning from Jim.
It's obvious that William has been brought up around an Amish mentor who has helped develop his carpentry skills and hard work ethics. Working together as a team is essential to accomplish the job
Thanks! I came for the sawmill a couple of years ago and stayed for the horse logging and framing! So, it's all good!
I was wondering about Skippy's breeding, and he certainly behaves like a heeler. Australian Blue Heeler was bred to work cattle, to move them by biting heels. No idea what else is in him but looks like kelpie, a herding dog also Aussie, that makes a wide cast and brings stock to you. Anyway, interesting that he feels drawn to the cattle.
Purebred heeler is blue speckled, often tri-colour head, often with black patches. Good with children, can be ferocious guard dogs, prone to overweight as a house dog in town, they like space and can run all day, as Skippy can.
Good vid as always, love to go for a jaunt up the road in William's buggy! Amish horses do get along right sprightly!
I enjoy most everything you do on the farm and in the woods. Has Abby gotten the rest of the wood for her porch floor? Her place is coming along fantastically, but it won't be long before she's had it with the mudding and taping and sanding. That tends to get old fast!
Great training exercise for that young horse.
.
I like the way that pin drops down in the hitch - have not seen that before.
Always enjoy seeing the Amish man to
man....Alexa and her dad of their yt channel explained so wonderfully about horses (animals period) and the importance of them being outside and him not having a barn for his horses..man he has 8 beautiful horses.. I really like this video today...but; shoot I like em all......lov from south alabama.
Hey Mr Jim & Brenda the horses looking nice as always
We live on coast of North Carolina. You should watch boats with twin diesel engines come to full stop and with one swift move back into slip with ease which requires alot of experience to make look easy.I understand the challenge of backing two wheel and four wheel carts having worked on farm in my youth.
Love all of the videos ❤❤❤
The saw mill is very interesting to see your work!!
I like. sawmill video When I was young my Dad logged with horses and ran a sawmill. I started working in the mill when I was twelve and started sawing at fifteen. watching you work in the woods a d sawing hits home with Me.
William can handle the horses very well
I think skippy puts himself in some dangerous situations but he seems smart and alert too at the same time, I believe he’ll be a great farm dog 💙 he’s still a pup I’m guessing? love your videos.
I tried to back up a small trailer with a car & couldn't!! Lol!! I only did it one time...I think, with practice I'd get better! But. With horses?? I don't know!! 😂
It seems to me the pigs don't have much room! Not much of a life! 😕 🤷♀️
That lumber is beautiful! Wow! I work at a Menards ( like Home Depot) & I NEVER see lumber this nice! William works hard! How in the world did you do all this yourself??!! This was a great video!! 😁
Around the 1:15 mark, Jim says that he hopes the audio is working good today. It was perfect timing on Ken's part, as he let a big fart go. Yep, audio is working fine Jim!!!
I thought the same thing...Ken made me laugh as the wind does blow 🤣
Love all the farm animals but Ken is my favorite 🐎❤
You bring back lots of memories of my grampa and dad using grampa,s two horses to make hay by hand from cutting to hauling and making haycocks to pulling logs for lumber and firewood
I enjoy all the videos, be well and God bless,
I like all of your content.
Thank you for the sawmill videos. Hope your day is a good one god bless you
Great stuff Jim, love the variety keep,up,the good work.
Those sliding tongues...I sure wish I had them! I was backing 4 abreast the other day up to a disc with the wheels kind of sunk into the mud from where I parked it last fall, oh my word trying to get the drawbar lined up lol, Get it almost perfect then someone takes a half a step forward or back. the disc not willing to budge either. Took a few minutes.
The workshops and lessons I teach backing is the most counter intuitive skill I teach, and I leave it till they get a good feel for the lines moving forwards.
Hi Jim and Brenda, hope you're all doing well. Something ive been wondering is have you considered getting another Percheron to make a heavy team? Also loving seeing Skippy, he's such a cutey.
I believe he likes the suffolks because they’re easier to harness (not so tall). Easier as age creeps up on you. But I agree, a pair of black Percherons is gorgeous!
LOL I like you Jim find it hard to back up a hay wagon (2axles) . I worked for a farmer who would have 2 wagons hooked together and back them both into the barn at once. I tried many times and many fails.
Yes , seeing the product get converted into the finished product of raw rough lumber is interesting
4H tractor rodeos we had when I was a kid one of the events was backing four wheel hay wagons around a course of cones. Try it with 2 hay wagons. Can say I have never had a life situation where that skill was needed!
Great video
I love and enjoy all your videos. It’s fun to see the animals and how they are fairing but I seem to think Lady looks a bit larger than she did with Bree at this stage but I could be wrong. If this is the case does this suggest she is carrying a colt this go round and not a filly? Just my observation is all and I know camera angles can make things seem larger and smaller, like rear view mirrors I guess!😉 I know it’s a power of suggestion thing but I swear I could smell the wood as you were edging it. It was a heavenly smell…in my mind. I am looking forward to more gardening and greenhouse visits and farming sessions when the weather turns but then I will miss logging and that’s why it’s good you mix up your content. As most of your subscribers probably are I am getting giddy for foaling day!!! Lady just keeps us focused on her special day every time I see her. I have to mention how much fun it is for me to see William working at the farm, I buy a lot of my canning and summer eating produce from an Amish family so it’s always a treat to learn new things about the their culture. Hope we do get an up close and personal lesson about their mode of transportation. I guess this is a deep rabbit hole chase just to let you know that yes I do like all your various content subjects. By the way…I enjoy barber day on the farm too Jim!!!:):):)
Maybe you could explain more about the edger and the mill operation.
I know since you already edited this video but the audio is good and even when you have wind sounds it’s not a big deal.