JDgreen
Lawn Addict
- Joined
- May 14, 2010
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Look at the attachment, and see if you can deduce what I used these kiddie blocks for when I first moved here back in 1988 and began cleaning up four acres of overgrown meadows and cornfields and making them a lawn. At one time I had 3 dozen of these blocks. Think hard, now.....
After rough cutting the waist high weeds and chopping up the cornstalks with a brush hog, and spending countless hours raking up the debris, I began mowing. The blocks were carried in a plastic bin on my tractor, and when I was mowing and saw a stone I needed to remove, it got a red block dropped on it. The blue blocks were used to identify high spots, low spots or holes to be filled in. And the yellow blocks were used to mark problem weeds like thistles or grapevines, etc. to be dug out or sprayed.
Did you properly deduct what the blocks were used for? Well, if not, don't feel bad....but did you notice the bottom row of blocks spell out "LMF COM"....so much for your powers of observation....:laughing:
After rough cutting the waist high weeds and chopping up the cornstalks with a brush hog, and spending countless hours raking up the debris, I began mowing. The blocks were carried in a plastic bin on my tractor, and when I was mowing and saw a stone I needed to remove, it got a red block dropped on it. The blue blocks were used to identify high spots, low spots or holes to be filled in. And the yellow blocks were used to mark problem weeds like thistles or grapevines, etc. to be dug out or sprayed.
Did you properly deduct what the blocks were used for? Well, if not, don't feel bad....but did you notice the bottom row of blocks spell out "LMF COM"....so much for your powers of observation....:laughing: