Indeed - and Steve is a great neighbour! He also does swops with work and machinery with his neighbours! They all look out for each other. The way it should be. Farmers and country folk are the BEST!
Tip number 1 Tim , never put your hand under the dolly/ percussion hammer on a post , taught to me by my father been contracting now for 20 + years in victoria cheers R.j Clarke keep up the good work
You're videos remind me of the reason I left the farm. And why I went industrial gypsy. I can't stand milking cows, and the corner post;s each of 640 acre, was two foot in diameter. Day's job to crow bar them in. More power too you, showing better, smarter ways of fencing. Agricultural Industry need way's of working smarter not harder, which most of your video do. Regards as always. Phil.
Hey how’s it going mr Thompson. You used to be my home room and agriculture teacher @ mt lilydale back when I was in year 9. Just seeing how your doing mate
@@FarmLearningTim Of course I’m keeping my nose clean haha! I’m going to tafe now and doing a Cert 3 in sound production and been loving it! Doing heaps better now
Tell us about the post's construction What dimensions, type of concrete, mix, reinforcement. Do you make them yourself or buy them? Any trouble with cracking?
Thanks Tim, another brilliant video. Steve is an absolute legend, just love his attitude. Cheers
'''Good fences make good neighbours.'' So true.
Since the dawn of time…… having said that, some neighbours require a gate, some require an electrified exclusion fence……
Good one Tim! Good video, good bloke and good Munro driver.
Indeed - and Steve is a great neighbour! He also does swops with work and machinery with his neighbours! They all look out for each other. The way it should be. Farmers and country folk are the BEST!
@@australianconcretefencepostsI am fencing contractor from india
Tip number 1 Tim , never put your hand under the dolly/ percussion hammer on a post , taught to me by my father been contracting now for 20 + years in victoria cheers R.j Clarke keep up the good work
That one of the main reasons we created a driving cap - to avoid having to put your hand under the hammer to hold the post while it drops!
Great content learnt a lot
You're videos remind me of the reason I left the farm. And why I went industrial gypsy. I can't stand milking cows, and the corner post;s each of 640 acre, was two foot in diameter. Day's job to crow bar them in. More power too you, showing better, smarter ways of fencing. Agricultural Industry need way's of working smarter not harder, which most of your video do.
Regards as always. Phil.
work smart not hard....the australian way. love this video. might invest in some concrete posts after watching this
appreciate the tip on the length of the strainer top rail.
u guys are well equiped😮
Hey how’s it going mr Thompson. You used to be my home room and agriculture teacher @ mt lilydale back when I was in year 9. Just seeing how your doing mate
G’day Dylan. I’m doing well thanks. Hope you’re keeping your nose clean and working hard!
@@FarmLearningTim Of course I’m keeping my nose clean haha! I’m going to tafe now and doing a Cert 3 in sound production and been loving it! Doing heaps better now
Good piler
Nice
Steve's a top bloke. You feel better for spending time with him.
@@FarmLearningTim i am fencing contractor from india
Awesome to meet you mate. I hope you are enjoying the content! Get in touch sometime if you like enquiries@timthompsonmedia.com.au
Tell us about the post's construction What dimensions, type of concrete, mix, reinforcement. Do you make them yourself or buy them? Any trouble with cracking?
ruclips.net/video/dixFcjCNIwM/видео.html don't forget to subscribe!
Where did you buy the post driver?
It’s a Munro
@FarmLearningTim I wonder can they be got in the UK or Ireland
@@brianduffy8768 Give em a call and tell them they owe me. 🤣 munroeng.com.au/
Nice