Summer update #2 (of 2), ranch stuff

Summer must be over because football has started – yea! (Go Texas Longhorns, Dallas Cowboys, Houston Texans, and Miami Dolphins!)

John and Sassy in the San Juan mountains

John and Sassy in the San Juan mountains

We last left off with us in Montrose, Colorado at our favorite campground (Centennial RV Park) and as usual, had a great time with our friends in the Western Slope 4-Wheelers club running around the San Juan mountains at 10-13,000 feet of elevation.  This year we didn’t spend quite as much time there as usual (about five weeks) because we had some other activities planned – we

Sassy at 12,000 feet in the San Juan Mountains

Sassy at 12,000 feet in the San Juan Mountains

The Columbine - state flower of Colorado

The Columbine – state flower of Colorado

were going to dry camp (no water/electric/sewer) in Leadville, Colorado at the All-for-Fun off-road event for a week (first time with the 290 watts of solar power I installed last summer and a residential-type of fridge), then we went to Chama, New Mexico to ride the Cumbres & Toltec steam train (we still like the Durango and Silverton train better), and then back home. The reason for coming home so early was due to our dear old friends

Just parked in Leadville, Colorado for the All-4-Fun off-road event.

Just parked in Leadville, Colorado for the All-4-Fun off-road event.

Alpine flowers

Alpine flowers

(Les & Karen) inviting us to spend a week with them on the beach at their time share in Cocoa Beach, Florida.

Remember earlier in the year when the house air conditioner needed to be replaced?  Continuing on in that same vein the washer/dryer combo unit in the coach decided to stop drying so Jane basically was left with a washing machine.  Not a huge deal because almost all campgrounds have a few washers and dryers available, but the Splendide needed to be repaired ($$.)

Then a couple of days before we arrived home, the GE Advantium microwave/convection oven decided to not work ($$$$.)  This was a big deal since Jane had some frozen meals that really needed an oven to properly cook and all we had working was a cooktop.  The washing machine and Advantium oven are eight years old and their failing while a disappointment is not totally unexpected (can’t believe we’ve been running around North America for eight years!)

The Splendide problem was the main circuit board ($325 + shipping) and the Advantium problem was not determined and whatever the cause was, most likely was not worth repairing (an eight year-old appliance that’s been bouncing on the road for 87,000 miles.)  So.. hello new Advantium (sigh, $1,000.)  The new Advantium was installed by John and helpers a couple of hours ago.

Jumping around a little bit with the narrative, we had a great time in Cocoa Beach with our buds but we forgot what 100% humidity feels like.  Wow – it’s like having a hot and damp towel wrapped around your entire body when you aren’t in air conditioning.  After fun and frivolity (and several way fun cocktail hours and dinners out) we pointed ourselves to Ft Myers to visit with some other very dear friends (going back to the 1980s), Bob and Judy.  Bob had heart bypass surgery a few months ago (with a complication) but he is doing well – it was great to see them again.  Then we headed to Naples to visit with our physician nephew Erik and his physician wife Karen and their three small boys; they are escapees from NY state and we are delighted to see them relocated south.  They are doing great and loving their new location.

Our new rhea birds

Our new rhea birds

Ranch stuff – the Rhea birds were delivered a couple of weeks ago and they are settled in and doing very well.  We discovered that the birds leave a rather large pile of green poop which our newly bathed Sassy the corgi discovered and rolled around in a few days ago.  Sassy is just like a two year old human baby – turn your back on them for ten seconds and look-out, chances are she’s doing something against house rules.  So Sassy was quite the smelly mess with a bit of her covered in green poop –  we gave her another bath on the deck.  Never a dull moment.

Today  our trapper delivered a nice 13″ long horned blackbuck antelope to be the new

Our new breeder blackbuck antelope

Our new breeder blackbuck antelope

breeder male.  We wanted genetic diversity to improve the health and bloodline of the herd so this was a huge moment for us.  We haven’t seen the herd in a few hours but we’re hoping the new big man on campus (BMOC) will settle nicely into his new role as patriarch of our herd of 25 or so does and spike bucks.

While driving the Jeep Rubicon around Colorado on the highways this summer, we decided that something had to happen as far as more power.  The Rubicon sometimes can just barely make the speed limit with the engine screaming along at 4,000+ RPMs – it’s frustrating for us as well as the poor folks following behind us.  The solution was more power was needed – this could either be:

Supercharger

The supercharger is almost installed 🙂

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

a complete engine/drivetrain change out for a V-8 Hemi (mega bucks) or getting more power out of the current engine (mini-bucks relatively speaking.)  So, after doing some research and talking to owners of supercharged Jeeps similar to ours, we decided to supercharge the Jeep’s straight-six engine.

Like always, John did all of the work and the results are spectacular – the wheel horse power went from about 100 to 211 HP. Wow.  Here’s some videos of the unboxing of the supercharger kit, a dynamometer run before and after supercharging and a road test.

Next on the agenda is to head to Clayton, OK mid-October  for a wheeling event and then on to St. George, UT for – wait for it – more off-roading 🙂

Ranch goings on, summer 2013 update #1

Greetings friends, family and loved ones!  As I type this we are at one of our favorite campgrounds, Centennial RV Park which is about 10 miles south of Montrose, Colorado.

San Juan Mountains

Looking south from the coach to the San Juan Mountains

As I look our our large salon window I can see the peaks of the beautiful snow-capped San Juan mountains, always a gorgeous sight to behold.  We will be here for about five more weeks so we will get our fill of Jeeping around the mountains with our club, the Western Slope 4-wheelers.  (There are several wildfires in Colorado but fortunately none near us.)

We have been blessed with rain at the little ranch this year – not a lot but it is always

Young buck going to auction

Young buck going to auction

coming down at the right time to keep the grasses and flowers growing – prayers are answered!  Assuming we continue to regularly get a little rain, our feed bill should be way down this year.  Speaking of feed, we have had a good year (so far) with the blackbuck antelope.  We sold several at auction, and are in the process of having the remaining bucks darted and sold off with the idea of bringing in a new breeder buck for genetic diversity.  We did have a very, very nice buck die for no obvious reason this spring, it was such a sad

Mature blackbuck male

This is the beautiful male that died for no obvious reason

event to see one of the nicest males in the herd die – he needed to be on another ranch and we could have used the money to offset prior years’ feed bill.  On a positive note, all of the three or four babies born this year are doing well unlike the last couple of years.

Since we are trying to be good stewards of our ranch, we have been active in an effort to rid the place of prickly pear cactus; after a three year spray program (Surmount) we have the cactus about 98% controlled (compared to it covering maybe 50% of the property at purchase!)  Now it’s time to aggressively tackle our thistle

Thistle flower

Thistle flower

population, we have been actively fighting them for years with some progress but if you leave a few thistles, they will produce thousands and thousands of seeds, so it seems like a losing battle.  After a chat with our animal trapper and lamenting about the thistle problem, he said he has Rhea birds (like an Emu or Ostrich) that eat the thistle heads and eventually the thistles completely disappear since they can’t produce seeds.

Lesser Rhea

Lesser Rhea

Sensing an opportunity for natural control instead of herbicides, we ordered two Rhea birds from the trapper to be delivered as soon as possible so we will be adding more exotic critters to the place.  John wants a couple of donkeys so don’t be surprised if we make that announcement one of these days.

On a very tragic note, we found out that one person of the two man trapper team we use was recently killed apparently in a domestic violence event with his wife just a few days after we received our proceeds from the antelope sale.  The sheriff found the man’s wife with a stab wound in the leg and he was dead of a gunshot wound.  Story goes that there was a long history of marital strife in that family but it’s profoundly sad to see that sort of violent conclusion to a marriage.  (The picture with the two guys and the young male on the ground was not the fellow that was killed.)

After we leave the Montrose area we are headed to Leadville, Colorado for the annual All-4-Fun off-road event and then we haven’t figured out where to go next.  We might wander up to the Yellowstone area, but no definite plans yet.  We’re very blessed to be here and never forget to give thanks 🙂 .

Review of the Northern Tools NorthStar 3-Pt. 55 Gallon Broadcast and Spot Sprayer — Two stars out of Five

This is a first, a product review on our blog.

The reason is that Northern Tools rejected (actually didn’t even have the courtesy to respond) my less than favorable review of their sprayer I just purchased for the ranch, so problem solved.  I’ll simply publish my own review.  Since Northern Tool didn’t like my review, you have to wonder how many other unfavorable, honest reviews also went on the chopping block.  I am now very suspect of their preponderance of favorable product reviews.

Bottom line: I would not recommend this product to a friend unless improvements are made.

On to the review..

Even with our diminutive ranch (by Texas standards) there are lots of weeds and undesirable flora to control and it has turned out to be way too much acreage for spot spraying so hence the need for a larger sprayer that’s tractor mounted.  Not wanting to spend $1,200-1,500 on a larger PTO driven boom sprayer, this product caught my eye at the Northern Tool website.  It seemed to be just what I needed and at a fairly decent price (although it has a 12 volt pump and not a PTO driven pump which means less output), so order placed and sprayer delivered by truck freight a few days later.

Assembly went quickly, you just have to add the legs, a few miscellaneous parts, the

Way too short power cord

Way too short power cord

hand-held spot sprayer and you’re ready for business. It became very obvious almost immediately that the included 12V cord (on-off switch and alligator clips to clip to the battery terminals) was way too short to use with a real tractor.  The battery in my Kubota is all the way forward so the cord was about six feet (yes, six) feet too short.  Apparently the product brain trust at Northern Tool thought the 12V cord that worked for their ATV and lawn tractor sprayers would work for this product.  Uh, fellows, did anybody actually think this through?  It doesn’t work for a real tractor.  So I had to add about six feet of 14 gauge wire before I could make the product operational.

I mounted it to the Kubota’s 3-point hitch, added a few gallons of water and tested it for function and leaks.  It seemed to work fine and didn’t have any leaks so the next morning it was time to spray Grazon PD on our thistle and other undesirables.

A side note when you’re figuring out your application rate and driving speed to get the right amount of herbicide applied: the little 2.2 GPM pump will only produce about 35 PSI of pressure so the only line in the application rate chart that’s used is 35 PSI.  The broadcast spray nozzle has to be 36″ off the ground for the full spray width and for the chart to be valid.

After I got everything figured out, I started spraying.  Well, almost started spraying.  I immediately found a leaky fitting that I could not completely stop from leaking.  That’s just great, my expensive chemicals leaking on the ground and no easy way to off-load the 30 gallons of product so I could leak-chase. I decided I had to live with the leak and started spraying.

While spraying I discovered a design flaw (first of several.)  The pressure gauge is mounted way too low for it to be easily seen from the operator’s seat.  It’s important to

The difficult to see pressure gauge

The difficult to see pressure gauge

keep an eye on the gauge to be certain you’re at the right pressure and that the spray nozzle hasn’t packed up, so I was constantly craning my head and twisting my body to get an occasional glance at the gauge.  When I did manage to see the gauge, I discovered the pump was cycling and off – it should have been operating continuously at 35 PSI.  Great – what now.  After removing various fittings (while losing more chemicals) I traced the problem to the broadcast spray nozzle filter screen insert – it was almost completely blocking the product flow.  Why I have no idea, there was zero detritus caught in the filter.  Solution, remove the filter and spray.  Then things started to finally go my way 🙂 .

Ye Olde Missing Drain Bung

Ye Olde Missing Drain Bung

After spraying my 30 gallons of Grazon, it was time to clean up the sprayer.  At that point, I discovered serious design flaw #2.  Northern Tool was too cheap to install a one dollar drain bung in the tank!  There is no drain bung.  What?! The product designer/planners must not have ever used a large sprayer before, I suppose they think you can clean out and drain a 55 gallon tank by crawling under the sprayer and unscrewing a little 1/2″ hose fitting.  To put it mildly, I was astounded at this oversight.

While I’m ripping into the product, there is another area for improvement.  As they have it

Where they expect you to drain the tank

Where they expect you to drain the tank

plumbed, the spot sprayer (the hand held wand) is always active, i.e., there is no three-way valve to throw to select either broadcast spray or hand-held wand.  I discovered this when I saw one of the hose clamps on the spray wand leaking.  This was an easy fix fortunately.  On the positive side, I really liked the spray wand although it needs to be a foot or two longer.

Where to from here, or after a complete re-work, turning this Two Star sprayer into a Five Star sprayer….

I’m going to completely re-plumb the sprayer with 3/4″ hose, change the little 2.2 GPM pump for a 5.5 GPM (I already have the pump), add a three-way valve to either select  broadcast spray or the spray wand, replace the spray wand with a better model and replace the short PVC hose on the wand with a 25′ rubber version.  I’ll weld on a bracket for the pressure gauge (I’ll look for a larger diameter gauge while I’m at it) to bring it up to operator eye-level.  If I get industrious, I might also make a couple of spray booms for it.  The big issue with a single broadcast spray nozzle is chemical drift if there’s much wind blowing – the nozzle is 36″ off the ground which is actually quite a bit.  Boom sprayers are much less sensitive to this problem because the nozzles aren’t nearly as far from the ground.