The Dog is alright I bathed her before her exile started. LOL She is easy to bath as the wife washes her about every other week.
As for the used diesel oil source. I have a barrel I keep all the used oil filters in. A local scrap guy comes and gets them. He has a press/crusher that mashes the oil out of the filters. He then can sell the scrap steel. I give him all of my used oil too. I do not burn it anymore.
This barrel is out in an open fronted shed. The scrap guy had just emptied it a few weeks ago so there where not many oil filters in it. My younger Grand son was here Sat. His mother had stopped at McDonald's and gotten him a sandwich. It was some kind of pork rib thing and he did not like it. I was working out in the shed and told him to just throw it into the garbage. He threw it into the filter barrel. Tonight the larger dogs must have knocked the barrel over to get at the sandwich. I tracked the dogs back to the shed from the house. The Shih Tzu is the only one soaked in the oil. The other dogs do not have the hairy feet she does. I was just able to wash their feet with a wet rag.
I did move all the dogs out to the shop for tonight. LOL They may survive with hiding from the wife.
I hope the cleaning company can do wonders or I will be drug along furniture shopping again.
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Today's Featured Article - A Belt Pulley? Really Doing Something? - by Chris Pratt. Belt Pulleys! Most of us conjure up a picture of a massive thresher with a wide belt lazily arching to a tractor 35 feet away throwing a cloud of dust, straw and grain, and while nostalgic, not too practical a method of using our tractors. While this may have been the bread and butter of the belt work in the past (since this is what made the money on many farms), the smaller tasks may have been and still can be its real claim to fame. The thresher would bring in the harvest (and income) once a y
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