Yup... Both my Uncle and my Mother were missing digits. My mother lost the two middle fingers to a Hay unloader. The ones that lift loose hay from the wagon to the mow. Ran off a hit and miss motor. Pull the trip and up it goes. Fingers got in the chain. My uncle not sure might have been the chain on a swather. Danger danger every where.
That is one of the most laborious jobs I've seen you display concerning Silo feeders. A lot of work for 3 1/2 feet of extension. Thanks for sharing the job with us.
Been around concrete silos a bunch in my life. Those are easy compared to what you are working with here. I had always wondered how the “blue” ones worked. Very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
I am a scotsman living in brazil and spent all my time on farms and various oil rigs worldwide and i constantly preach dont stick your hand where you would not stick another object well done eric
When we pulled our Harvestore unloader we used round pipe to support the unloader instead of square tubing. We did not use a winch or come along either. We had support on the far end of the pipes made out of old wagon wheel, tubing and a piece of wide angle iron instead of using wooden blocking to support it. We used a rope/pulley system per Harvestore manual. The rope strung through a pulley system and around a slipping pulley on unloader motor. By tightening rope and jogging motor the unloader would pull itself out or back in depending on rope hook up direction. This system came with the silo. Surprised you are not doing that. Awesome video of showing what, why and how everything works. Brings back memories. Thanks
What a tough job! But the way your dad explains it - its 100% worth the work. That unloader is expensive, but i'm sure you guys think of it as priceless for the work it does. Thanks for the video bro - keep em up!
You took the words right out of my mouth when you said “I have a love/hate relationship with all forms of feed storage”. I feel the exact same way, they all seem to have their advantages and disadvantages.
Good job! You working with your dad reminds me of working with my dad in my younger days, a lot of silent communication and you both know what has to be done. No drama.
Thats definitely quite the job. I only have experience with the top unloading silos. Watching this makes me want to mail you an electric winch lol. Thanks for taking the time to explain and show that it was pretty cool
I was a serviceman for Western Harvestore (Alberta) back in the mid 1970's. This sure brought back some memories! One was cutting off a bent arm and the stretched cutter chain with a torch while inside the "dome" at night when it was snowing and forty below... The "Goliath" unloader frozen solid to the structure... Snapping the steel winch cable... The farmer in a panic to get his cattle fed...My second job of the day and that was well over a hundred miles away. My partner was useless and I hadn't seen a bed in over a day. The only thing I remember that I liked about working around Harvestores was the smell of the silage! A 25' x 90' Harvestore was worth about 100K back then and the unloader was another 16K. (Yes, Canadian dollars but ours was worth 10% more than yours back then!) Although there are still a few left in Alberta, they don't sell them here anymore. (Too expensive and dangerous) I think they are still available in Ontario. The Workman's Compensation Board had a pretty thick binder full of injury claims which is probably why they closed up shop. It looks like bunker or pit silos are the way to go now. Dammit man! You are still changing the arm length of your unloader the way I did 45 years ago! Check around! There are better ways and tools available to do that job now. Nice job on this video! Thanks!
There were a few Harvestors on neighboring farms in the NJ county where my Dad farmed. They were a kind of fascinating mystery. Knew that they unloaded from the bottom, had to be opened and closed every time you needed to fill or unload, but know nothing about the maintenance of them, particularly when it comes to this. It has been interesting reading the many comments asking why you do not have some kind of power assist to pull the unloader out and put it back in. I imagine doing this had to be a very careful and delicate operation. get it wrong or slightly out of line and you would be looking at a huge repair bill. Thank you for the very informative video and you and your Dad's explanations.
First time I have seen how the Harvestore unloader works. I know owners complained about how difficult they were to service because they had to be pulled completely out. You guys have obviously done this before and you work very well together.
Dennis & Eric, Thank You for another fine Showing of FARMER INGENUITY‼️ A lot of LOVE there‼️ Great feeling of accomplishment‼️ Many commenters wondered why not use tractor or skid steer to push & pull⁉️ My guess is Yall can’t get one back there- based on overgrown weeds. If it were easy access, I’m sure the area would be maintained to keep rats, snakes and other critters out. I am a Come-a-Long guy, not fond of those straps even though they do have their place. Several have said use a “helper bar” on come-a-long. I use a 4’ galvanized pipe over my handle but with the easier pulling, I over taxed my old cable. Thankfully, no one was behind it when it popped- it would have hurt them badly AMERICAN FARMERS-AMERICAN HEROES‼️ 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 ❤️🤍💙
Wow I was actually 59 years, 9 months and 24 days old when I learned how a bottom feeding Harvestore silo works. Great video as always. I recall the first silo was arm strong unloaded. When my uncle purchased top self unloaders for them
Nice to see you and pops working together so well. When I was younger the only thing I learned from help my dad was how to hold the flash light and get yelled at. 🤣🤣 We work much better together in our old age. Love your videos and miss working on the farm. We sold our dairy in NY in 2001. Sad day.
We have 3 of those Harvestores. They are now converted for shelled corn. SOooooo glad I don't have to do that anymore....still have a scar on my right palm from stitches after fixing one of them. The emergency room does not appreciate farm clothes, I can tell you that.
I service them unloaders back in the 90s work for Central Illinois Harvestore, serviced all dairy's and all Universities loved that job. Very dangerous to work on. Been many dig outs too. We did it all.
All a the Harvestorers I built back in the day, I never got to see much more after we placed the floor inside and hung the last two sheets. Interesting, thanks for sharing.
I've never noticed how dirty farming actually is. I have seen other farmer channels and the guy never get his hands dirty but as always Erick shows us the whole picture on what farming really is. Thanks A lot man.
Great video, it brings back many memories of filling the harvestore on the family farm I grew up on. Craziest thing I ever saw was when we broke the upper chain inside and it was about 100 degrees of angle away from the access door. The AO Smith repair guy had to dig his way and crawl in there under the feed dome with a breathing air system on. That guy was a REAL man, I don't know if I could have done that. Like you said we always had a love/hate relationship with the silo as well, great when it worked, super expensive when it didn't and very labor intensive when you had to short and long arm it. I still miss the smell of fresh chopped alfalfa though...
This is what seperates you from other farmer RUclipsrs. You actually show the work what your doing! The rest just talk about it with the camera facing them all the time. Love your content 👌👍
Wow you boys over there do things different from over hear in the UK. That was hard going but nice to see your dad and you working well together. We have open clamps hear and silos for grain but not silage. Very interesting video thank you for showing us this.
i do get excited the videos are a great view on what diffeculties a farmer has or atleast a part of a farmer as he also has cows so that's another cost to have
What a beast of a job! I assume that you have to shorten it back up when the silo is empty/refilled. Very interesting piece of equipment. Let’s hope that is does not break down very often. Thanks for sharing this nasty job with us.
I used to complain about our Big Jim unloaders when the center hole got plugged. But looking at all the parts on your unloader, makes me think I had it pretty dang easy!🤣🤣🤣
UGH 😩 that was one hard job especially getting it back in inch by inch WOW 😳 Good way to describe it LOVE HATE RELATIONSHIP. Thanks for showing how it works 😊
We had a few Harvestore silos growing up, I was young and had no idea about long or short arming it. I would guess we had a long arm in it because I can remember using the bar to help it ratchet because of the tight silage.
Well that was tortuous. Imagine forgetting one of the bolts after putting it back in. I do like the grease job, nice and slick. Thank you for showing us another one of the unfun jobs that have to be done. Be well.
👍👌🇨🇦❤, funny thing your video coming out today, I just helped my dad do this last week, on the rails my dad drilled holes and put in a hydraulic ram for pushing the arm back in, after the ram was extended, we retracted the hydraulic ram and moved it up a few holes and proceeded on, this made pulling and pushing the ram alot easier, better on your arms than a come along, hope this helps
Eric and Dennis, great job and HARD work. History of using a Come-Along is noted. However, here is a suggestion: Not sure you have enough room for a tractor but maybe the skid steer would fit outside the opening and use a winch or use the skid steer to gently pull the long arm out. Just a thought and would make life easier and probably quicker.
It’s amazing and a little sad for me to see you guys whaling away at that job when I can’t even open a darn jar with my bare hands anymore. That looked like one heck of a job, particularly for July. I know it’s beneficial to sweat but it never seems to feel that good when you’re doing it.
Very enjoyable to watch. If anyone had any doubt about how hard of work it is to farm/ranch, this should give them some kind of an idea. The knowledge base and just sheer strength it takes to complete jobs on this kind of operation is mind-boggling.
Wow, we had a dairy many years ago. Everything was by hand. We only had 80 cows. It was so much work seven days a week. You and your father are very hard workers. Keep up the good work and may God bless you.
It's very great video I always feel that I am learning something new every time!!! Very good to see you and your dad work so good together...Thanks for another great video
We had 6 harvesters between 2 farms I bought a warn winch after shoulder replacement surgery for front of pickup to pull the unloaded with it was so much easier. But always loved the alfalfa haulage because of production results and improved in cow health.
Holy smokes! That's some respectable labor. I'd definitely consider an electric winch for that application. You could mount one to the wall and pull it both ways. You could also add some legs to the cross brace at the far end and use the wood as a safety and for set-up. It'd still store pretty small against a wall.
Enjoyed the video. Wow that was allot of very hard strenuous work. We always thought we'd like to have upright silos but we got by with three trench ones. Y'all take care and God bless.
I am not a farmer and I don't want to pretend to know anything but when I watch this video I wonder to my self, why is there no winch on any tractor or pickup? Not sure how heavy that unit is but maybe a winch from Harbor freight might be better. You guys are the expert but when I see someone with a come-along struggling I scratch my head. But I am sitting in front of my computer and you and your dad are doing it. Love the video and even though you may not think its important, I have learned so much from your behind the scenes videos and have mega respect for you and all the farmers out there.
ty for all the hard work ..and putting food on my table most i ever did was bucking hay in the summer for my uncle ...at least i had a great meal at the end of the day
I am so very greatful for all you farmers giving us yummy milk and beef to fill our bellys God Bless you and your family. I learned something new today.
Hi guys, I really enjoyed this one. Good job explaining the need to do this operation. It is a simple process, but not necessarily an easy one. Here comes my city boy's two cents... What if you mounted an electric wench on the wall and a block and tackle on the opposite wall to pull the arm out and then back in? Small cheap wench is a minor investment but sufficient if you will only be using it rarely. Dirt cheap at Harbor Freight(cheap enough to replace rather than repair). If you need more pulling force you can just add more pulleys across from one another. It looked like the hardest part. Hope this might be helpful.
Now that was man work that only men could do. I didn't realize how sophisticated that thing was.Good thing you know how to deal with it. Farming is so much more than planting and milking and I see it more every time. Good video. Peace.
Sarah Ruso Id love to see a women actually TRY and do that, no women has the strength to tighten the chain by hand. They would probably give up after one try and cry when the got sweaty
@@realredditstories420 A pity I did not record my friend Kirsty helping with our unloaders installation, she was every bit as useful as any man and better than most. It is tough life but in farming we are all equal. Possibly more here, in UK where women play important part and control many large farms.
HELLO ERIC I SEE WHY EASY JOBS CAN TURN INTO DANGEROUS JOBS THIS JOB WAS QUITE INTERESTING AS THEY WOULD SAY THE WORK IS NEVER DONE ON THE FARM THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS VIDEO 👍👍🇺🇸 .
Man i can almost smell the silage. I used to love the smell of it no matter what it was, corn, grasses, whatever. Another thing I miss from my dairy farming days.
Nice video. I hated working on the unloaders. Once I was doing the same thing and the chain was split apart. the chain slipped of the unloader & the teeth went into my legs. I had to stand there until enough people were there to handle the weight of the chain safely & get it out of my legs...
wow, you guys really have to put a lot of elbow grease and sweat into this operation. Seems like you are mechanical engineers as well as the other dozen degrees in different fields you must have as a requirement. My hats off to you!!!
Great video we used to pull it and do what your doing but getting help was not coming so had to do it my self so I pulled it out with a tractor and put it in with a tractor still s good few hours of hard work
"I have a love hate relationship" When I was a kid I had to stomp sileage when filling and hand fork it out of the silo when feeding, so find some appreciation for the poor machine; cheaper than hiring another farm hand and it doesn't get tired. There were no pit silos back in them days. The first pit silo I saw was when I was in college and drove truck at night hauling corn cannery by product to a feed lot silo pit.
Thanks for sharing the experience - I would always work on the side of the conveyor that is coming out of the silo - that way if you fall into it you won't be pulled into the silo.
I work on them Harvesters all the time will make a big hook so u don't have to sort arm it and it helps it from getting pin down to.. u guys did awesome by the way
Hey you guys work hard enough - if you use a winch and a couple of snatch blocks you will be able to pull and push that think in and out like a hot knife through butter :-) I know lol - I work with that kind of rigging all the time. Love your videos for sure!!!! Keep them coming - everyday would be ok with me !!!
New respect for farmers who are actually engineers, ranchers, chemists, veterinarians, mathematicians and day laborers all rolled into one.
Hgghhgjj
I see why Farmers lose their fingers! What an essential but scary looking machine! It's nice to see you and your dad working together 😊
i was just thinking there were a lot of ways to hurt yourself on that machine.
being a farmer is s bit scary
I was literally thinking the same thing so many different ways on a farm.
Yup... Both my Uncle and my Mother were missing digits. My mother lost the two middle fingers to a Hay unloader. The ones that lift loose hay from the wagon to the mow.
Ran off a hit and miss motor. Pull the trip and up it goes. Fingers got in the chain.
My uncle not sure might have been the chain on a swather.
Danger danger every where.
For sure, that could be a mean prop in a horror movie. Stay safe guys.
That is one of the most laborious jobs I've seen you display concerning Silo feeders. A lot of work for 3 1/2 feet of extension. Thanks for sharing the job with us.
I have learned from this channel that a good farmer has to be an equally good mechanic. Thanks for sharing Eric
Eric, you are an inspiration to many people. Every day you are doing important work. Every day you give work and life your all. Thank you.
My favorite part of your channel is seeing you working side by side with your Dad! Stay safe and keep well!!!
I love watching stuff like this because you know it took multiple generations before they had it down this easy
Been around concrete silos a bunch in my life. Those are easy compared to what you are working with here. I had always wondered how the “blue” ones worked. Very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
I am a scotsman living in brazil and spent all my time on farms and various oil rigs worldwide and i constantly preach dont stick your hand where you would not stick another object well done eric
Now thats some hard work, thanks Eric and Dennis for showing us behind the scenes with the silo unloader maintenance!
I sure do love seeing hard work being done. Unafraid of getting your hands dirty and getting the job done. Great job Father Son Duo!
When we pulled our Harvestore unloader we used round pipe to support the unloader instead of square tubing. We did not use a winch or come along either. We had support on the far end of the pipes made out of old wagon wheel, tubing and a piece of wide angle iron instead of using wooden blocking to support it. We used a rope/pulley system per Harvestore manual. The rope strung through a pulley system and around a slipping pulley on unloader motor. By tightening rope and jogging motor the unloader would pull itself out or back in depending on rope hook up direction. This system came with the silo. Surprised you are not doing that. Awesome video of showing what, why and how everything works. Brings back memories. Thanks
What a tough job! But the way your dad explains it - its 100% worth the work. That unloader is expensive, but i'm sure you guys think of it as priceless for the work it does. Thanks for the video bro - keep em up!
You took the words right out of my mouth when you said “I have a love/hate relationship with all forms of feed storage”. I feel the exact same way, they all seem to have their advantages and disadvantages.
Good job! You working with your dad reminds me of working with my dad in my younger days, a lot of silent communication and you both know what has to be done. No drama.
Thats definitely quite the job. I only have experience with the top unloading silos. Watching this makes me want to mail you an electric winch lol. Thanks for taking the time to explain and show that it was pretty cool
I was a serviceman for Western Harvestore (Alberta) back in the mid 1970's. This sure brought back some memories! One was cutting off a bent arm and the stretched cutter chain with a torch while inside the "dome" at night when it was snowing and forty below... The "Goliath" unloader frozen solid to the structure... Snapping the steel winch cable... The farmer in a panic to get his cattle fed...My second job of the day and that was well over a hundred miles away. My partner was useless and I hadn't seen a bed in over a day. The only thing I remember that I liked about working around Harvestores was the smell of the silage!
A 25' x 90' Harvestore was worth about 100K back then and the unloader was another 16K. (Yes, Canadian dollars but ours was worth 10% more than yours back then!)
Although there are still a few left in Alberta, they don't sell them here anymore. (Too expensive and dangerous) I think they are still available in Ontario.
The Workman's Compensation Board had a pretty thick binder full of injury claims which is probably why they closed up shop. It looks like bunker or pit silos are the way to go now.
Dammit man! You are still changing the arm length of your unloader the way I did 45 years ago! Check around! There are better ways and tools available to do that job now. Nice job on this video! Thanks!
There were a few Harvestors on neighboring farms in the NJ county where my Dad farmed. They were a kind of fascinating mystery. Knew that they unloaded from the bottom, had to be opened and closed every time you needed to fill or unload, but know nothing about the maintenance of them, particularly when it comes to this. It has been interesting reading the many comments asking why you do not have some kind of power assist to pull the unloader out and put it back in. I imagine doing this had to be a very careful and delicate operation. get it wrong or slightly out of line and you would be looking at a huge repair bill. Thank you for the very informative video and you and your Dad's explanations.
First time I have seen how the Harvestore unloader works. I know owners complained about how difficult they were to service because they had to be pulled completely out. You guys have obviously done this before and you work very well together.
Dennis & Eric,
Thank You for another fine Showing of FARMER INGENUITY‼️ A lot of LOVE there‼️ Great feeling of accomplishment‼️
Many commenters wondered why not use tractor or skid steer to push & pull⁉️
My guess is Yall can’t get one back there- based on overgrown weeds. If it were easy access, I’m sure the area would be maintained to keep rats, snakes and other critters out.
I am a Come-a-Long guy, not fond of those straps even though they do have their place.
Several have said use a “helper bar” on come-a-long. I use a 4’ galvanized pipe over my handle but with the easier pulling, I over taxed my old cable. Thankfully, no one was behind it when it popped- it would have hurt them badly AMERICAN FARMERS-AMERICAN HEROES‼️
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
❤️🤍💙
Wow I was actually 59 years, 9 months and 24 days old when I learned how a bottom feeding Harvestore silo works. Great video as always. I recall the first silo was arm strong unloaded. When my uncle purchased top self unloaders for them
I’ve got the exact same come along and I broke the handle off it last week just as yours has done. You gave me a great idea to fix it now... thanks
Man... I can't believe that having to work on those silos is still so labour intensive. Dairy farmers are some of the hardest workers I know! - Dave
Nice to see you and pops working together so well. When I was younger the only thing I learned from help my dad was how to hold the flash light and get yelled at. 🤣🤣 We work much better together in our old age. Love your videos and miss working on the farm. We sold our dairy in NY in 2001. Sad day.
We have 3 of those Harvestores. They are now converted for shelled corn. SOooooo glad I don't have to do that anymore....still have a scar on my right palm from stitches after fixing one of them. The emergency room does not appreciate farm clothes, I can tell you that.
Your videos keep me intrigued from start to finish - I don’t find myself fast forwarding at all - thank you for the great content.
Nice to see you and your Dad working on a tough project like that Eric. Your talents are impressive! Enjoyed the video.
Glad to see your dad's shoulder is better, bet you were too when it was time to put the unloader back in the silo. Thanks for sharing.
I service them unloaders back in the 90s work for Central Illinois Harvestore, serviced all dairy's and all Universities loved that job. Very dangerous to work on. Been many dig outs too. We did it all.
All a the Harvestorers I built back in the day, I never got to see much more after we placed the floor inside and hung the last two sheets. Interesting, thanks for sharing.
I've never noticed how dirty farming actually is. I have seen other farmer channels and the guy never get his hands dirty but as always Erick shows us the whole picture on what farming really is. Thanks A lot man.
Dads a handsome fella , thanks for all you guys do !
Great video, it brings back many memories of filling the harvestore on the family farm I grew up on. Craziest thing I ever saw was when we broke the upper chain inside and it was about 100 degrees of angle away from the access door. The AO Smith repair guy had to dig his way and crawl in there under the feed dome with a breathing air system on. That guy was a REAL man, I don't know if I could have done that. Like you said we always had a love/hate relationship with the silo as well, great when it worked, super expensive when it didn't and very labor intensive when you had to short and long arm it. I still miss the smell of fresh chopped alfalfa though...
Morning Eric! Can’t believe how much your channel is growing 👍👍
Eric your the best youtuber and farmer on RUclips! Love your videos!
RUclipsrs in Poland are great RUclipsrs too 😉👍 Watch martinflashgordon, Polish youtuber working in Denmark, a lot off knowledge from him.
This is what seperates you from other farmer RUclipsrs. You actually show the work what your doing! The rest just talk about it with the camera facing them all the time. Love your content 👌👍
Wow you boys over there do things different from over hear in the UK. That was hard going but nice to see your dad and you working well together. We have open clamps hear and silos for grain but not silage. Very interesting video thank you for showing us this.
Amazing the amount of work it takes to maintain equipment and keep animals healthy. Hats off to you.
No gloves and I didn't even seen any bleeding fingers. Nice job, guys!
3:17 you see the dad's index bleeding.
@@wardy940 I missed it the first time around. Oh well, a lot less than I would have been bleeding.
Well depends on job, sometimes gloves are in way.
I have worked on those unloaders and have been cut buy those nasty knives and hooks. Be careful!!
Great video Eric Who els gets so exited when Eric posts
i do get excited the videos are a great view on what diffeculties a farmer has or atleast a part of a farmer as he also has cows so that's another cost to have
Should get a Facebook account and a Instagram account
I marvel at you and your dad. Thank you for showing how hard farmers work to bring food to this country
no gloves, no protection, no bleeding, it is perfect!! good job!
What a beast of a job! I assume that you have to shorten it back up when the silo is empty/refilled. Very interesting piece of equipment. Let’s hope that is does not break down very often. Thanks for sharing this nasty job with us.
It is absolutely incredible the things that Dennis and Eric know how to do. Wow - what a task.
You really gotta get your brother into the farm! Like your dad had with his brother! This is a LOT of work!
I live just outside of Lancaster and I pass your farm all of the time, and t is beautiful keep up the good work
Wow, super cool video. Always wondered how the Harvestor unloader looked. We have lots of Harvestor silos here in Mid Michigan.
My neighbor repairs harvestore silos for a living. He uses the same hand powered come-a-long. The dude is ripped! 💪🏻
I used to complain about our Big Jim unloaders when the center hole got plugged. But looking at all the parts on your unloader, makes me think I had it pretty dang easy!🤣🤣🤣
UGH 😩 that was one hard job especially getting it back in inch by inch WOW 😳 Good way to describe it LOVE HATE RELATIONSHIP. Thanks for showing how it works 😊
We had a few Harvestore silos growing up, I was young and had no idea about long or short arming it. I would guess we had a long arm in it because I can remember using the bar to help it ratchet because of the tight silage.
Well that was tortuous. Imagine forgetting one of the bolts after putting it back in. I do like the grease job, nice and slick. Thank you for showing us another one of the unfun jobs that have to be done. Be well.
Eric my man!!! Coming in clutch with another lunch video! I just passed 800 subs Eric I’m catching you!
you better catch him and surpass him now hurry up!
👍👌🇨🇦❤, funny thing your video coming out today, I just helped my dad do this last week, on the rails my dad drilled holes and put in a hydraulic ram for pushing the arm back in, after the ram was extended, we retracted the hydraulic ram and moved it up a few holes and proceeded on, this made pulling and pushing the ram alot easier, better on your arms than a come along, hope this helps
Love to see you and your Dad working together. Good hard work & well done. What a blessing. God Bless!
Eric and Dennis, great job and HARD work. History of using a Come-Along is noted. However, here is a suggestion: Not sure you have enough room for a tractor but maybe the skid steer would fit outside the opening and use a winch or use the skid steer to gently pull the long arm out. Just a thought and would make life easier and probably quicker.
The close-ups on this video are amazing if not a bit scary! Great collaborative effort
It’s amazing and a little sad for me to see you guys whaling away at that job when I can’t even open a darn jar with my bare hands anymore. That looked like one heck of a job, particularly for July. I know it’s beneficial to sweat but it never seems to feel that good when you’re doing it.
Just wanted to say if thats you in profile photo you are quite beautiful.
My back hurts just watching this! Thank you for the upload and all your hard work! 👍🏼✝️❤️
Very enjoyable to watch. If anyone had any doubt about how hard of work it is to farm/ranch, this should give them some kind of an idea. The knowledge base and just sheer strength it takes to complete jobs on this kind of operation is mind-boggling.
I work on a dairy farm it's really fun watching you guys work instead of me
A farmer is a hands on man, an equipment handler and must be a good mechanic.
Wow, we had a dairy many years ago. Everything was by hand. We only had 80 cows. It was so much work seven days a week. You and your father are very hard workers. Keep up the good work and may God bless you.
It's very great video I always feel that I am learning something new every time!!! Very good to see you and your dad work so good together...Thanks for another great video
Hello Friends I follow you on RUclips Im from Puerto Rico . I worked for many years in dairy and I like your videos
What an absolute ball ache of a job, I was sweating and out of breath for you. I would leave the long arm on forever now.
👍😎👍 MDS
We had 6 harvesters between 2 farms I bought a warn winch after shoulder replacement surgery for front of pickup to pull the unloaded with it was so much easier. But always loved the alfalfa haulage because of production results and improved in cow health.
Holy smokes! That's some respectable labor. I'd definitely consider an electric winch for that application. You could mount one to the wall and pull it both ways. You could also add some legs to the cross brace at the far end and use the wood as a safety and for set-up. It'd still store pretty small against a wall.
Enjoyed the video. Wow that was allot of very hard strenuous work. We always thought we'd like to have upright silos but we got by with three trench ones. Y'all take care and God bless.
That looks like a whole bunch of work, I am glad we have top unloaders.
I am not a farmer and I don't want to pretend to know anything but when I watch this video I wonder to my self, why is there no winch on any tractor or pickup? Not sure how heavy that unit is but maybe a winch from Harbor freight might be better. You guys are the expert but when I see someone with a come-along struggling I scratch my head. But I am sitting in front of my computer and you and your dad are doing it. Love the video and even though you may not think its important, I have learned so much from your behind the scenes videos and have mega respect for you and all the farmers out there.
ty for all the hard work ..and putting food on my table most i ever did was bucking hay in the summer for my uncle ...at least i had a great meal at the end of the day
I am so very greatful for all you farmers giving us yummy milk and beef to fill our bellys
God Bless you and your family. I learned something new today.
“Is this still on”. Haha I love it. Great vids man.
Hi guys, I really enjoyed this one. Good job explaining the need to do this operation. It is a simple process, but not necessarily an easy one. Here comes my city boy's two cents... What if you mounted an electric wench on the wall and a block and tackle on the opposite wall to pull the arm out and then back in? Small cheap wench is a minor investment but sufficient if you will only be using it rarely. Dirt cheap at Harbor Freight(cheap enough to replace rather than repair). If you need more pulling force you can just add more pulleys across from one another. It looked like the hardest part. Hope this might be helpful.
Now that was man work that only men could do. I didn't realize how sophisticated that thing was.Good thing you know how to deal with it. Farming is so much more than planting and milking and I see it more every time. Good video. Peace.
Why can only men do that ?
Sarah Ruso Id love to see a women actually TRY and do that, no women has the strength to tighten the chain by hand. They would probably give up after one try and cry when the got sweaty
@@realredditstories420 A pity I did not record my friend Kirsty helping with our unloaders installation, she was every bit as useful as any man and better than most. It is tough life but in farming we are all equal. Possibly more here, in UK where women play important part and control many large farms.
@@snowwhite4h watch the video. Men doing man work, it does exist.
I Play Gamez if you watched the video they both were struggling and at the end they pulled it together at once.
Your work is never done. Thanks from NC! KEEP IT UP!
Wow, that looked like a long and difficult job. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you so much for making videos Eric
the dad is more and more confortable on the cam that cool to see !!! family operation are the best
HELLO ERIC I SEE WHY EASY JOBS CAN TURN INTO DANGEROUS JOBS THIS JOB WAS QUITE INTERESTING AS THEY WOULD SAY THE WORK IS NEVER DONE ON THE FARM THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS VIDEO 👍👍🇺🇸 .
You are the one RUclipsr I’ve seen with no hate at all love the great videos
got your workout for the day, your such a good mechanic
imagine having to learn all this farm work as an adult. when family farms are lost the knowledge gained over years of teaching is lost too.
Man i can almost smell the silage.
I used to love the smell of it no matter what it was, corn, grasses, whatever.
Another thing I miss from my dairy farming days.
Nice video. I hated working on the unloaders. Once I was doing the same thing and the chain was split apart. the chain slipped of the unloader & the teeth went into my legs. I had to stand there until enough people were there to handle the weight of the chain safely & get it out of my legs...
wow, you guys really have to put a lot of elbow grease and sweat into this operation. Seems like you are mechanical engineers as well as the other dozen degrees in different fields you must have as a requirement. My hats off to you!!!
Another video of things I never knew about or thought about. But admire the people who do.
Great video we used to pull it and do what your doing but getting help was not coming so had to do it my self so I pulled it out with a tractor and put it in with a tractor still s good few hours of hard work
"I have a love hate relationship" When I was a kid I had to stomp sileage when filling and hand fork it out of the silo when feeding, so find some appreciation for the poor machine; cheaper than hiring another farm hand and it doesn't get tired. There were no pit silos back in them days. The first pit silo I saw was when I was in college and drove truck at night hauling corn cannery by product to a feed lot silo pit.
There is no end to the hard work on a farm. You and your dad handle it just fine !
I love your videos cuz you take time to show and tell what your doing on your channels your Dad should be very proud
Thanks for sharing and explaining. I've heard the term but never really knew what it meant. 👍👍👍✌️
2 adults working side by side and not one curse word!! Mission accomplished!!
Thanks for sharing the experience - I would always work on the side of the conveyor that is coming out of the silo - that way if you fall into it you won't be pulled into the silo.
I work on them Harvesters all the time will make a big hook so u don't have to sort arm it and it helps it from getting pin down to.. u guys did awesome by the way
Omg I remember those days! Always loose skin on those. We had them in the 70’s one thought put nitrogen gas in above to combat oxygen losses
Very interesting how the blue silos work. Great video.
Always great to see your pops out there with ya as you said not what you want to do but is necvesaasery
Hey you guys work hard enough - if you use a winch and a couple of snatch blocks you will be able to pull and push that think in and out like a hot knife through butter :-) I know lol - I work with that kind of rigging all the time. Love your videos for sure!!!! Keep them coming - everyday would be ok with me !!!