Hi Robin, have you heard of or seen a coolant pressure tester to find leaks? Snap on and Mac sell the same unit, (or atleast used to) I am not sure who manufactured them, but they used to be made in the USA. They are awesome tools, because you can pressurize the system, then look for leaks. Some leaks are obvious, and can be seen immediately, some you may have to leave the pressure tester on for a few hours, or overnight I find this tool to be useful, because you can also use it to verify your repair when it is completed. I bought mine used locally for not much money. There seem to be some available every now and then. The downside is the kit does not come with the adaptors you will need for farm equipment and trucks. There is a heavy truck adaptor kit, and for the farm equipment, you might have to measure each one, then special order it. I havent done that yet, but Stant and Gates make adaptors also, so you can order them through a local auot parts store However, you seem to be doing well without one! I think you have a good process when it comes to fixing things, and I enjoy watching your videos. Foliar feeding with molasses looks very promising. Have you heard of compost extract/Johnson Sue? There is a guy in Montana who has a lot of interesting short videos about regenerative practices he is trying, including compost extract. His channel name is Korey Faque. What I like about compost extract is you can make it on farm, and it doesnt involve paying someone else. It adds fungus and bacteria to the soil, something that I think is not beleived to be important in modern input focused farming. It can be used as a seed treatment, or applied to the soil as a liquid. Potential benefits are better soil structure and nutirent uptake. This would probably help with water absorbtion, compaction, and many people show longer roots and noticeable increases in yield In the past, farmers have been very stubborn, so I beleive thats why these practices have not caught on. I think these new ideas are worth a try on a small scale, so you can limit your risk. Not tellin' you what to do. 😎👍 just some ideas
@@jb-vz4wb I have heard of the coolant system testers but often times I find it’s not worth spending the money of specialized tools. 1 I don’t use them enough, 2 when I do I don’t have the experience of training to use them anyways. If I can’t find the problem it’s becoming more efficient/cost effective to have the experts come out. I am very excited about the molasses and was quite surprised the outcome was so noticeable. We will be trying to again for sure. Thanks for watching the videos, Glad you enjoy them
Most guy out here would shut down everything and run a water truck or trailer to help out the fire crews instead of just taking a video of someone else having problems… just saying
@@bradenconway9066 🤦 ok hero. if I ran out of the yard every time I saw smoke I would get nothing done. Further more within about 5 minutes I had all the information I needed on the smoke and understood it was taken care of. Sometime less is more your just in the way
@@millionairefarmer.Glad ya let everyone know in the video about fire out fast!!! Most people or hero's don't purposely light a fire when it's dry... Locals saved our area's many houses/yards north of ya in 2023... The large fire that jumped the Peace River.... Plus four? other fires that same day and nearly burnt all Hines Creek if "MANY" did not help right away... Caught everyone off guard.... That day horrible... Think it happens elsewhere... But ruined much in the first hour where there were many local fires and Volunteer firefighting maxed out that day in May..... A tractor hooked onto a disc or a trailer with water tank full pump/hoses at the ready when it's dry is always good for the community. Especially when a disaster strikes in dry spring or nearer the start of harvest and too many ripe crops to fuel the fire!
U need a geography lesson, he farms in northern Alberta. U must not know what working early in the morning or in the fall is like. What do U actually know ? Look I can be a smart ass like U too.
@@ashleythompson5550 I like to be warm thats for sure, I like to think of myself as somewhat of Pablo the penguin. I should have been born much closer the equator.
@@JRNAGY78 And eye protection the sun is always well above the tallest trees at seven AM in Sunny September Hythe LOL.. Then ya need matching designer sunglasses 24/7 to suit the coat when it gets to 23C at a cloudy 1 PM...
👏🤙🤙👏👏👏Good morning my wonderful and beautiful friend, keep going, brother. Welcome to Morocco. 🇲🇦👍👍👍
@@MmmmKjhg-y2b good morning
Hi Robin, have you heard of or seen a coolant pressure tester to find leaks? Snap on and Mac sell the same unit, (or atleast used to) I am not sure who manufactured them, but they used to be made in the USA.
They are awesome tools, because you can pressurize the system, then look for leaks. Some leaks are obvious, and can be seen immediately, some you may have to leave the pressure tester on for a few hours, or overnight
I find this tool to be useful, because you can also use it to verify your repair when it is completed.
I bought mine used locally for not much money. There seem to be some available every now and then. The downside is the kit does not come with the adaptors you will need for farm equipment and trucks. There is a heavy truck adaptor kit, and for the farm equipment, you might have to measure each one, then special order it. I havent done that yet, but Stant and
Gates make adaptors also, so you can order them through a local auot parts store
However, you seem to be doing well without one! I think you have a good process when it comes to fixing things, and I enjoy watching your videos.
Foliar feeding with molasses looks very promising.
Have you heard of compost extract/Johnson Sue?
There is a guy in Montana who has a lot of interesting short videos about regenerative practices he is trying, including compost extract. His channel name is Korey Faque.
What I like about compost extract is you can make it on farm, and it doesnt involve paying someone else. It adds fungus and bacteria to the soil, something that I think is not beleived to be important in modern input focused farming. It can be used as a seed treatment, or applied to the soil as a liquid.
Potential benefits are better soil structure and nutirent uptake. This would probably help with water absorbtion, compaction, and many people show longer roots and noticeable increases in yield
In the past, farmers have been very stubborn, so I beleive thats why these practices have not caught on. I think these new ideas are worth a try on a small scale, so you can limit your risk.
Not tellin' you what to do. 😎👍 just some ideas
@@jb-vz4wb I have heard of the coolant system testers but often times I find it’s not worth spending the money of specialized tools. 1 I don’t use them enough, 2 when I do I don’t have the experience of training to use them anyways. If I can’t find the problem it’s becoming more efficient/cost effective to have the experts come out. I am very excited about the molasses and was quite surprised the outcome was so noticeable. We will be trying to again for sure. Thanks for watching the videos, Glad you enjoy them
If you go out to Rio Grande, they’ve got that sticky dust. Blowing out rads 3-4 times a day.
I hear the smokes in the air makes the issue worse
If breakdowns would only stop at three would be nice.
Been a decent enough run so far
I spot some scentless chamomile at the beginning lol
From 16' to 21' were awful falls
Most guy out here would shut down everything and run a water truck or trailer to help out the fire crews instead of just taking a video of someone else having problems… just saying
@@bradenconway9066 🤦 ok hero. if I ran out of the yard every time I saw smoke I would get nothing done. Further more within about 5 minutes I had all the information I needed on the smoke and understood it was taken care of. Sometime less is more your just in the way
@@millionairefarmer.Glad ya let everyone know in the video about fire out fast!!! Most people or hero's don't purposely light a fire when it's dry... Locals saved our area's many houses/yards north of ya in 2023... The large fire that jumped the Peace River.... Plus four? other fires that same day and nearly burnt all Hines Creek if "MANY" did not help right away... Caught everyone off guard.... That day horrible... Think it happens elsewhere... But ruined much in the first hour where there were many local fires and Volunteer firefighting maxed out that day in May..... A tractor hooked onto a disc or a trailer with water tank full pump/hoses at the ready when it's dry is always good for the community. Especially when a disaster strikes in dry spring or nearer the start of harvest and too many ripe crops to fuel the fire!
yield is always higher on the other side of the fence
That’s what we thought for sure
That’s a pile of cats wandering around there. Supplying the Chinese food joint in town? 🤣👍🍻
Now be careful!!! It takes hours to fill out the paperwork for hurt feelings!!
@@barneyshort8227 I’ll refer them to my hr department. 🤣👍
For your information It’s called a Clowder of cats, not a pile
U must be very cold natured u always seem to have a coat on
U need a geography lesson, he farms in northern Alberta. U must not know what working early in the morning or in the fall is like. What do U actually know ? Look I can be a smart ass like U too.
@@JRNAGY78 easy big guy, was most likely just an observation.
@@ashleythompson5550 I like to be warm thats for sure, I like to think of myself as somewhat of Pablo the penguin. I should have been born much closer the equator.
@@JRNAGY78 And eye protection the sun is always well above the tallest trees at seven AM in Sunny September Hythe LOL.. Then ya need matching designer sunglasses 24/7 to suit the coat when it gets to 23C at a cloudy 1 PM...