• Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.

What did YOU do today?


Was on the way home from work and got a call that her escape has a flat tire, so I drive to her work to change it, she had everything out & ready to go. Got the piece out, not sure what it is/was. its heavy for it size, sticks to a magnet well. almost looks like a key of some sort. Got it plugged & put back on. Holding air so far, hope it’s still at 34 pounds in the morning. Heres a picture of that “tire deflater”.

IMG_7965.jpeg
 
I managed to get my property mowed with the lawn tractor today before it got to brush hog territory. Still need to do something about a brush hog and there is a bunch of work that needs done before the poison ivy starts really going. Just what I needed, more to do! :tease:
 
Was on the way home from work and got a call that her escape has a flat tire, so I drive to her work to change it, she had everything out & ready to go. Got the piece out, not sure what it is/was. its heavy for it size, sticks to a magnet well. almost looks like a key of some sort. Got it plugged & put back on. Holding air so far, hope it’s still at 34 pounds in the morning. Heres a picture of that “tire deflater”.

View attachment 110314

looks a little bit like one of those tubes/points they use on the police spike strips. What was she doing before you called her?
 
Was on the way home from work and got a call that her escape has a flat tire, so I drive to her work to change it, she had everything out & ready to go. Got the piece out, not sure what it is/was. its heavy for it size, sticks to a magnet well. almost looks like a key of some sort. Got it plugged & put back on. Holding air so far, hope it’s still at 34 pounds in the morning. Heres a picture of that “tire deflater”.

View attachment 110314
Just looks like a piece of scrap from torching steel to me
 
looks a little bit like one of those tubes/points they use on the police spike strips. What was she doing before you called her?
just on her daily commute, was ok when she left the house, must of picked it up on her way in. Tire held air overnight. Seems like new tires always are prone to getting stuff in them but wore out ones dont. go figure. At least she didn’t try to drive home on it.
 
there is a bunch of work that needs done before the poison ivy starts really going. :tease:


dang. poison ivy is terrible. pants, long sleeves, neck gaiter, hat, gloves, and glasses for that stuff
 
Just watching the news as I wake up with Lincoln, and something popped up and I thought of you guys. I’ve worked with law-enforcement here and there through my career.

I may have a line on a bunch of new, barely used, pop up tents and canopies. Must pick up at Columbia in the east or UCLA in the west.

I’ll get more information
 
dang. poison ivy is terrible. pants, long sleeves, neck gaiter, hat, gloves, and glasses for that stuff
Even worse than poison ivy is wild parsnip. You look at that stuff wrong and it burns you.
Well, technically, it doesn’t burn you. It just makes your skin about 50x more sensitive to the sun wherever the oil has touched, so after just a minute or so you get horrible burns and blisters.
 
i have never even heard of that. we have stinging nettle all over here. my yard is swamped with it so sometime i am going ot have to use round up on it and pull the plant roots once the bodies are killed off.

we had dirt brought in last year and the guy must have gotten it from a wild field because once it rained on that dirt, our grass became nettle
 
i have never even heard of that. we have stinging nettle all over here. my yard is swamped with it so sometime i am going ot have to use round up on it and pull the plant roots once the bodies are killed off.

we had dirt brought in last year and the guy must have gotten it from a wild field because once it rained on that dirt, our grass became nettle
Yeah, it’s not fun. It looks similar to Queen Anne’s lace, but yellow flowers not white.

If you handle it at night and then wash yourself really well, it’s fine actually.
The summer camp I work at over the summers past (and this one) has it everywhere, it’s super invasive up in the Midwest.

As maintenance, part of our job is to deal with it. So we go out after sundown with pants and long sleeves, and put it all in a trash bag after we pick it out of the ground. Then we shower thoroughly, and I’ve never been butned
 
We have wild raspberry vines that have hairs all over them. Those things will give you a mean rash that burns like a mother.
Luckily it’s not an oil so it doesn’t spread.

Don’t worry I’ve got poison oak, ivy, and sumac to make up for that.

The joys of rural mountain living.


For the stuff that has oil. I use a pumice soda that is like a heavy degreaser. Called Tecnu Extreme. I found it once after I got poisoned all over the top half of my body and wanted to die.

If I’ve been playing in the yard I’ll just take a cold shower and scrub the whole body with it. Magic.
 
dang. poison ivy is terrible. pants, long sleeves, neck gaiter, hat, gloves, and glasses for that stuff
Both my property and my parents was overgrown with poison ivy. For the most part it’s been beat back into the woods, but it’s still an ongoing battle. I try to spray the crap out of what I can as early in the year as possible
 
Both my property and my parents was overgrown with poison ivy. For the most part it’s been beat back into the woods, but it’s still an ongoing battle. I try to spray the crap out of what I can as early in the year as possible

My parents moved to a house they had built in the middle of an oak forest when I was around 10. The soil was very sandy, so the lawnless cleared area was awesome for my brother and I to play with our Tonka trucks; a two-acre sandbox! Apparently the sand was full of poison ivy roots and my Brother and I basically spent our childhood summers constantly on prednisone as we couldn't shake it otherwise. We are both over 6ft. but the rest of my family is a good bit shorter, and Mom always joked that was the reason why. Oddly enough my Mom and Sister aren't allergic and never had issues with it.
 
My parents moved to a house they had built in the middle of an oak forest when I was around 10. The soil was very sandy, so the lawnless cleared area was awesome for my brother and I to play with our Tonka trucks; a two-acre sandbox! Apparently the sand was full of poison ivy roots and my Brother and I basically spent our childhood summers constantly on prednisone as we couldn't shake it otherwise. We are both over 6ft. but the rest of my family is a good bit shorter, and Mom always joked that was the reason why. Oddly enough my Mom and Sister aren't allergic and never had issues with it.

Wow. Two 6-foot tall 10 year olds, covered with poison ivy at a house in the forest where nothing will grow on the ground. That’s got Hollywood written all over it.
 
Wow. Two 6-foot tall 10 year olds, covered with poison ivy at a house in the forest where nothing will grow on the ground. That’s got Hollywood written all over it.
Make no mistake, things definitely grew on the ground. Itchy things.
 

Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad

TRS Events

Member & Vendor Upgrades

For a small yearly donation, you can support this forum and receive a 'Supporting Member' banner, or become a 'Supporting Vendor' and promote your products here. Click the banner to find out how.

Recently Featured

Want to see your truck here? Share your photos and details in the forum.

Ranger Adventure Video

TRS Merchandise

Follow TRS On Instagram

TRS Sponsors


Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad


Amazon Deals

Sponsored Ad

Back
Top