Stuart Barden in Kenya

Sunday, October 12, 2014

This is the stat's page of this blog, I am always interested in which country the viewers are from

Pageviews by Countries

Graph of most popular countries among blog viewers
EntryPageviews
United States

35379
Australia

24545
Kenya

5175
France

4009
Canada

3130
Germany

2371
United Kingdom

1643
Poland

1636
Russia

1242
Italy


 

809

Page views last month
5,085
Page views all time history
99,425

Pageviews by Browsers

EntryPageviews
Chrome

26636 (26%)
Internet Explorer

24918 (25%)
Firefox

21810 (21%)
Safari

19210 (19%)
Opera

3945 (3%)
Mobile Safari

1612 (1%)
Mobile

332 (<1%)
BingPreview

320 (<1%)
CriOS

233 (<1%)
chromeframe

129 (<1%)

Murrum (Gravel) floor in the shed

We have spent about 10 days carting Murrum (Gravel) here and there, we had 10 loads here and five there mainly on roads ect and while we were at it we finished the shed floor off properly, the night guard spent each night watering it and we then compacted it. It took about 25 loads or so just for the floor and shed apron, something I have learnt about building roads ect is it always takes a lot more gravel than you think. We use our Daewoo to dig and load it so other than diesel and a bit of wear and tear it is very economical.  

Three Silly (but fun) Kids

Grace, John and Wiz playing with their Dads glasses
 

Barley seed cleaning

We cleaned and treated about 45t of barley for seed last week, Syngenta have a really good small seed cleaner that they supply if you use their seed treatment products, the system is bag in and bag out so we had about 10 casuals from the small holders next door load ect. The ladies then sew the bags and we store them in a shipping container to keep them away from mice and rats.
 Some hard working fellows, 45 t of Barley in bags fills a 40ft high cube container to capacity, we don't use the standard 90kg bags that are common here, instead we use smaller 50kg bags, it is hard enough work without a 90kg bag.

New Clutch for the truck

Our truck has only 160,000km on it from new and I was a bit surprised we had to put a new clutch in it, some earthmoving friends Wahid and Kashif showed us how to do it, it took about 2 hours to remove the old one and about 4 to replace.