JOHN DEERE DEMOLITION DERBY
Today is January 19, 2017 with nearly perfect weather for this time of the
year. Our temperature here was in the lower 70s, plenty of sunshine
with a very light breeze.
I had today ear marked to rake and mulch leaves with the John Deere X300 lawn
tractor and melt several partial gallons of .38 caliber wad cutter lead bullets that
I had since 1979. I believe, I initially had about 400 pounds of the
lead bullets collected from a DOC firing range (with permission) in
Salemburg, NC. Over the years, I cast them into lead fishing sinkers of
various types; e.g., egg, teardrop, pyramid, etc. and have given most of
them away to my fishing buddies. I wanted to get rid of the partial gallon
containers of the lead bullets that were stored on the basement woodworking shop floor
being in
the way and will have some clean lead spheres to store after the smelting
operation. The plastic containers were literally coming apart due to
the age of them. I do not see
myself casting any into fishing sinkers anytime soon, but will probably either sell or trade
the cleaned lead.
While getting the lead melted in an old black iron fish cooker pot over a
propane gas burner, I raked
leaves with a plastic leaf rake and herded the leaves into piles with the
lawn tractor and rake.
Everything was going pretty good until I got
on the lower dirt/gravel drive way near my deer hanging White Oak tree nicknamed "Tom Dooley"
in the pix above and drove the lawn tractor
over the edge/crest of a serious drop
off aka embankment which has a very steep incline being twenty six (26) feet
measured to the small branch aka Culpepper
Creek.
I tried to back the lawn tractor out but could not get any traction due to
the steep angle and it was tilted to one side making it very dangerous.
I decided to chain the lawn tractor to a piece of 1/4 inch x 3 inches wide
steel flat plate that I drove into the ground as an anchor. If I had
my truck, it would be a simple job to pull the lawn tractor out with the truck which is
currently on loan
to our youngest daughter as her only means of transportation at this time.
Our Buick Lucerne has plastic/fiberglass bumpers and not a good place to
secure a chain to the axle without doing some damage and that was out of the question.
I used a couple heavy duty chains with hooks and a chain drive aluminum
housing Coffing hoist
aka come-a-long and pulled the lawn tractor out several feet and decided to
see if I could back it out. The lawn tractor was still secured to the
steel anchor in the ground and fired the lawn tractor engine up. Instead of hitting the
reverse pedal, I depressed the forward pedal and it moved forward rapidly a few
feet before I could think about applying
the brakes and the lawn tractor came to an immediate stop against a couple small saplings
down the
embankment and I was thrown from the John Deere lawn
tractor
between the saplings like a
medieval catapult. The next thing I knew, I was rolling down the
steep brushy embankment and came to a stop at the bottom near the little creek and
expecting the lawn tractor to come down the embankment as I did. I did
some fast scrambling while on all fours trying to get out of the direct path
where the lawn tractor was at, of which I couldn't see the lawn tractor from my
position at the little creek below being on all fours. I might be a
candidate for the
82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, NC
since I now have some airborne experience and definitely have the landing
and rolling
part down pretty good.....grin if you must! The
pix below doesn't really depict how steep and deep the embankment is due to
the compression of the depth of field of the lens. I might try and see if I can get a
pix from the bottom of the creek to the upper level for a visual comparison.
The pix below gives a more realistic view of how steep the drop off from
our yard is to the little creek bed below. The fluorescent orange
surveyors ribbon is in the upper right hand portion of the picture where the
lawn tractor stopped with the right side of the deck wedged against several
a couple small saplings about two to
three inches in diameter. That is a serious terrain change and acute
slope:
Looking at where the Lawn Tractor stopped, I must have went airborne between
the small saplings to the right of the lawn tractor because of where I eventually stopped at the edge of the creek bed. I am not sure, but
believe the heavy duty chain came loose attached to the lawn tractor rear
end frame since the hole in the tractor frame
would only allow a small portion of the hook to engage and didn't have a
carabineer attached to make the proper safety connection. I have a
couple carabineers on my practice tree stand and hunting platform lifelines, but I didn't think
that far ahead to utilize one of them. When you sacrifice safety,
Murphy's Law is never asleep! I
thought securing the lawn tractor with the chain would do the job, but it
wasn't enough. Again, I am thankful to our Lord Jesus Christ that I
didn't get injured. I will be sore tomorrow for sure, but
that is better than broken bones and worse!
The lawn tractor didn't like much before going down the embankment.
The lawn tractor has a gross weight of 575 pounds and could have done
some serious bodily injury to yours truly since it took a second or two for
me to scramble out of the direct path the lawn tractor might have taken.
A couple two to three inch diameter saplings was all that was needed to hang
up on the lower deck to stop the lawn tractor from going down the
embankment and the chain attached helped stop the forward motion of the lawn tractor
as well. Once I ejected from the seat, the safety seat interlock
switch stopped the engine.
The chain drive come-a-long aka Coffing hoist has about a five (5) feet
chain travel and had to reposition the hoist several times while I had
another safety chain in place when I removed the slack on the Coffing hoist
extend the chain back out for another pull. The flat steel plate used as an anchor bent and used
a 2 inch diameter steel threaded rod and drove it into the ground a foot or more
and it definitely held secure.
Above, making some head way pulling the tractor off the edge of the
embankment.
After winching the lawn tractor onto level safe ground, it was no trouble
to back it out the rest of the way.
I finished blowing the leaves and did notice that the right front wheel
bracket on the deck was bent at about a thirty (30) degree angle and will have to
straighten it out; hopefully it will not break.
Used a large hammer and block of wood to do a deck wheel alignment job:
DOUGLAS PETTIGREW'S DEMOLITION DERBY
My number one Brother-in-Law, Douglas Pettigrew of Reidsville, NC was
blowing out his high dollar four wheeler this past hunting season with his
cap turned around backwards and ran into their pump house at a
high rate of speed and did 4K worth of damage to his machine. He was
lucky he did not have any serious injuries as well. My Sister SusieQ,
definitely put a lot of "chin music"
on him for acting like a teenager, driving the four wheeler in such a
reckless manner. I did some serious grinning on his accident and he will
now get a
chance to grin on my personal John Deer demolition derby début for sure.
The left front tire and suspension was bent inward and also canted, requiring a number of
replacement parts and like I stated above, cost 4K dollars to get it
repaired.
Our mutual friend,
Robert Webster of Hamlet, NC had a field day giving
myself some serious "chin music"
for that accident and said he likes to have someone on his boat that knows
how to operate it in case of a health incident, etc., but there was no way
either Doug or myself was getting near the controls of his boat.....we all
had to grin on that statement.
Robert did confess, that he backed a golf cart into Lake Tillery that
belongs to the owner of the Family Camp Ground near the Swift Island Boat
landing. He stated it was a mechanical malfunction, however I like the
song that
Collin Raye sang, "That's my story and
I am sticking to it" which adds an element of
self-justification to it. He had to winch it out using a come-a-long and told the owner
about the incident. I guess all of us has a turn at some kind of
"fluke" accident, whether or not we make a
huge contribution to its
creation or not.
LEAD SMELTING OPERATION
Below are some pixs of my lead smelting operation; a little multi-tasking
going on:
I weighed one of the small lead spheres and it was about 8 pounds and have
18 of them. The larger sphere in the melting pot weighed 21.5 pounds
giving me a total weight of approximately 165 pounds plus or minus of melted lead.....that
is a lot of potential fishing weights!
To summarize, when you
jeopardize safety for a split second by not exercising common sense, an
accident can and most of the time will happen. It is no wonder that
women out live men; they certainly do take less chances than us men folk....grin if you must!
Web published by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 01-19-17 and updated on
01-20-17.
Déjà vu
It appears that I did not learn my earlier lesson with the John Deere
lawn tractor since I got too close to the edge of the steep embankment and
had to bail off the tractor thinking it was going down into the gulley, but
there were several large tree members from my deer hanging tree Tom Dooley
aka Dula that stopped the lawn tractor. I did not suffer any injury
and thanks to Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior. My guardian Angel
definitely is working some overtime on myself for sure!
From what I remember when I got to close to the edge of the embankment, I
pressed the forward pedal instead of the reverse and I knew immediately the
lawn tractor and myself were going down the embankment, however I slid off
the tractor seat before it came to a complete stop from the log jam!
Saved by the log jam in front of the lawn tractor and our Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ!
From this pix, you can clearly see the angle of the embankment which is
steep.
There was a small log about 6 inches in diameter wedged between the front
tires and steering assembly which prevented the lawn tractor from being back
out.
The removal procedure is about the same as used earlier in 2017.
Again, I am thankful to our Lord for not obtaining and injuries from this
accident. Hopefully, in the future I will avoid getting too close to
the embankment cutting grass and utilize my weed trimmer instead.
Web page updated by Bill aka Mickey Porter on 05-06-2023.
LEAVING ON A
SPIRITUAL NOTE
If you do not know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, please take
this moment to accept him by Faith into your Life, whereby Salvation
will be attained.
Ephesians 2:8 - 2:9 8 For by grace are ye saved through
faith; and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God: 9 Not of
works, lest any man should boast.
Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for,
the evidence of things not seen.”
Romans 10:17 “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
the word of God.”
Open this
link about faith in the King James
Bible.
Romans 10:9 “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the
Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved.”
Open this
link of Bible Verses About Salvation,
King James Version Bible (KJV).
Hebrews 4:12 “For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and
sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder
of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of the heart.”
Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of
God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Romans 3:23 “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory
of God;”
Micah 6:8 “He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what
doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and
to walk humbly with thy God?”
Philippians 4:13 "I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me."