This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!
What someone is willing to pay for something determines what it's worth. What i'm saying is what I'm seeing for sale in the realm of the type house/parcel I'd like for my "forever" home, is selling for WAY less than what it would cost if one bought the land and built something of similar spec on...
Thanks for sharing the process, it's very interesting.
Is there a general % you guys who GC your own home builds expect to save over just paying a custom home builder? I have kept an open land MLS search for the perfect "forever home" lot for years but with current prices It feels like a guy...
XOP is what I use for a lightweight "portable" "mobile" stand. Basically a Lone Wolf type stand but made in china and cost a lot less.
My steel milleniums are "hang and leave" stands. They are more cumbersome for hang and hunts but are a little bigger/more comfortable than XOP if it's not going...
Could also see tillage termination of some herbicide resistant weeds relieving some herbicide use. Kills weeds before they go to seed and any re growth might be more susceptible to herbicide when less mature or require less specialized herbicide? Just spitballin..
Seems like the question is how working the ground and assisting more existing weed seed to germinate offsets the benefit of tillage killing weeds that have already germinated.
I don't know ag processes well but it seems tillage might be somewhat of an alternative to additional burn down...
Yep. Grant woods planting two diverse blends a year that are best suited to the seasons is a far cry from a single monoculture crop that leaves the dirt without living roots for extended periods of time.
I thought conventional wisdom is that increased chemical use should be expected for no-till...
But straight wall is a new thing (which you’re obviously familiar). I heard Steve Hansen on the Land podcast recently indicating he thought they and all the other technology may be contributing some to the overall decline in quality that even IA is seeing over the past couple decades.
A 350...
I don't "blame" locals or NR for the way things are, its just human nature. But i sure like it when states fight to keep quality hunting for their residents of all economic classes vs selling it to he with the most $.
Don't necessarily disagree with a lot of points in favor of NR landowners...
Unfortunately the nickel plated stuff is a little less desirable to hand loaders. Once fired brass can bite a guy in the ass if that one firing was a hot round in a looser chamber than what he wants to use it in. Can’t really know if that’s a problem most of the time until trying.
I’d guess...