Posted by funtwohunt on June 29, 2011 at 20:36:33 from (63.172.252.159):
I heard a few days before the flood gates were opened above Baton Rouge and New Orleans to save the two towns from flooding it was determined to would be less of a loss if the farm ground was flooded instead. This is because has a lower value of loss per capita. Now the question that was asked but I hadn"t heard an answer: Is the insurance companies whether farm, crop, property, home owners, etc. going to pay anything out because the flooding was man made (opening the gates) and not act of god or mother nature? The Corp of Eng. for example have done this several places along the Missouri. And maybe it was determined by the federal gov. that it is mother nature and man is trying to control the losses. Just curious about how it was handled. Thanks funtwohunt
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Today's Featured Article - Identifying Tractor Smells - by Curtis Von Fange. We are continuing our series on learning to talk the language of our tractor. Since we can’t actually talk to our tractors, though some of the older sect of farmers might disagree, we use our five physical senses to observe and construe what our iron age friends are trying to tell us. We have already talked about some of the colors the unit might leave as clues to its well-being. Now we are going to use our noses to diagnose particular smells. ELECTRICAL SMELLS
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