It’s hard to part with a proven machine!! I’m glad the old Case will still be going to the field. Can’t wait to see the Gleaners out and about. Hopefully the Tracked Gleaner will make an appearance. Thanks George for getting some cool footage!!
Nice to see the old combine still earning it's keep - reminds me of my younger days when I was out chasing them and they were new then! Keep up the good work!
peppermint oil / scent will keep mice out of an area! place them in your cab, none will remain in the cab, mice are so destructive critters! they have girdled 3 trees we planted! Japanese blood lace leaf maples! great job on harvesting the wheat! so nice with low dust helps so much so you can see what you are doing! can not wait for the next video! good luck and stay healthy!
Great video as usual. George will come around eventually, lol, after all you're going to sneak him in once in awhile, hahahaha. He won't have a chance to run, lol.
Thanks for the great video Brandon and George. Speaking of Welkers In Montana the last couple of years their harvest has been really bad due to lack of rain and some hail storms I often wonder how many bad years they can stand before they go busted😢
Your welcome!....I'm sure they will be ok them boys know how to do it and survive they are good farmers and they farm with in their means and they don't go out and buy tons of new equipment to worry about making payments on
Brandon have you tried moth balls in the cab? Dad tried that in his 95! The drain tubes on a 5020 would plug. Water would slash out. The wheat I seen in your video was much better then ours!
Sure hate to see the wheat coming off Brandon? Would rather see planting and working ground, means warm weather just starting? LOL, another great video young man, hopefully Dad Strength is doing well. Hang in the Brandon, took DP a long time to get Jerry comfortable with the camera, George will also. LOL, Thanks
I'm sorry lol but I'm ready for the fall cool air and no humidity lol....thank you!! Dad Strength is doing well!!....well when he is ready I'm sure he will come around
@@dirtgrainsteel I agree. I have been around gleaners my father in law and brother in law had them for years. They are good machines. I just like to brag about my CR They are unbelievable in soybeans. They biggest thing do a thorough job of cleaning grain out at the end of the year to keep mice out. Your channel is awesome keep up they good videos.
wheat looks good what are you seeing for yields in your area here in Central NDak crops looks pretty good do you guys get docked if moisture is over 14% for shrinkage?
Different brands or verities are different so unless it’s the same thing as what you remember it could be shorter or taller higher yields or lower another thing is if you are wanting to bale the straw a farmer is likely to plant a wheat with a taller straw so they get more bales
@@dirtgrainsteel they are rare around here to but I have one and they are impressive. Had a Deere for 30 years. There is no comparison. Grain sample capacity is incredible. They where the first rotor.
It’s hard to part with a proven machine!! I’m glad the old Case will still be going to the field. Can’t wait to see the Gleaners out and about. Hopefully the Tracked Gleaner will make an appearance. Thanks George for getting some cool footage!!
Nice job on the camera George.
Thanks
Nice to see the old combine still earning it's keep - reminds me of my younger days when I was out chasing them and they were new then! Keep up the good work!
Thank you!
Great job great video thanks Brandon and George
Dont forget you are always welcome to NDak to join he fun at harvest LOL
peppermint oil / scent will keep mice out of an area! place them in your cab, none will remain in
the cab, mice are so destructive critters! they have girdled 3 trees we planted! Japanese blood lace leaf
maples! great job on harvesting the wheat! so nice with low dust helps so much so you can see what
you are doing! can not wait for the next video! good luck and stay healthy!
Great video as usual. George will come around eventually, lol, after all you're going to sneak him in once in awhile, hahahaha. He won't have a chance to run, lol.
Lol yeah he will...thank you!
Great video thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
you guys are doing a great job, love your content!
Thank you!
Thanks for the great video Brandon and George. Speaking of Welkers In Montana the last couple of years their harvest has been really bad due to lack of rain and some hail storms I often wonder how many bad years they can stand before they go busted😢
Your welcome!....I'm sure they will be ok them boys know how to do it and survive they are good farmers and they farm with in their means and they don't go out and buy tons of new equipment to worry about making payments on
use mint extract to treat for mice. they don't seem to like it.
Thanks. Great video
Your welcome thank you!
Nice
👍👍
Brandon have you tried moth balls in the cab? Dad tried that in his 95! The drain tubes on a 5020 would plug. Water would slash out. The wheat I seen in your video was much better then ours!
You are right about the moth balls 👍
We kept mothballs in the grain trucks and the combine.
Yeah we have tried tons of moth balls they don't seem to bother our mice lol
RPM's = revolutions per minutes/wrong
RPM = revolutions per minute/correct
Just a little trivia. mice/snakes etc. hate mothballs!
Sure hate to see the wheat coming off Brandon? Would rather see planting and working ground, means warm weather just starting? LOL, another great video young man, hopefully Dad Strength is doing well. Hang in the Brandon, took DP a long time to get Jerry comfortable with the camera, George will also. LOL, Thanks
I'm sorry lol but I'm ready for the fall cool air and no humidity lol....thank you!! Dad Strength is doing well!!....well when he is ready I'm sure he will come around
Using older equipment you don't have to worry about electrical problems like the new one's do
The gleaner are pretty much all electrical
They are but they are simple electrical
@@dirtgrainsteel I agree. I have been around gleaners my father in law and brother in law had them for years. They are good machines. I just like to brag about my CR They are unbelievable in soybeans. They biggest thing do a thorough job of cleaning grain out at the end of the year to keep mice out. Your channel is awesome keep up they good videos.
Have you watched any of Letsdig18 videos? He was using his Bucyrus 22B last night. He has questions.
He probably won't ask for my help I'm not a big enough channel 🤪
@@dirtgrainsteel he was asking for anybody to answer in the comments. Not sure if he got it figured out. Something about the boom lock
You know sooner or later you need to get rid of some junk before your place starts to look like Brayden Bowman's AC junk yard. Lol!
wheat looks good what are you seeing for yields in your area here in Central NDak crops looks pretty good
do you guys get docked if moisture is over 14% for shrinkage?
The wheat does not appear to be as tall as it was 50-60 years ago, my memory bad or has the wheat changed.
Different brands or verities are different so unless it’s the same thing as what you remember it could be shorter or taller higher yields or lower another thing is if you are wanting to bale the straw a farmer is likely to plant a wheat with a taller straw so they get more bales
Wheat varieties have gotten shorter over the years so they stand better
What do you estimate the wheat yield to be ? It looked like it wasn’t very heavy but I guess you have had a dry year . Nice video
Kansas wheat was short too, got to be the newer hybrids, grow heads not straw. Poor yields here, many 25 b/a average fields with our drought.
I would say that wheat went maybe 15 bushel to the acre I haven't ran it across the scale yet to see
The only rotor combine that does good in wheat is the new holland twin rotor.
LOL..
Them are kinda rare around here
@@dirtgrainsteel they are rare around here to but I have one and they are impressive. Had a Deere for 30 years. There is no comparison. Grain sample capacity is incredible. They where the first rotor.