Not only a double picture but I need to rotate them. 🤣
Anyway, that it the receiving station where they wash the berries out of out trucks and semis.
I will post pictures of the fields when we flood / beat and elevate the berries in the next week or so.
I'm pretty small Grower. We do Fresh Fruit - dry harvest for Thanksgiving on October 9th up here. But of course we flood our fields too for process harvest.
The cranberries don't grow in water. We spend a lot of time and resources to make sure they stay out of water.. other than harvest
Wisconsin is defiantly the biggest growing area, but you're not too far south. I'm on the 49th parallel and Warrens WI is on the 45th... and I garentee we don't get as cold as they do.
The first picture is what the field looks like at planting... we transplant plugs every sq foot. The second picture is an established field with a fresh fruit picker. That's as tall as they get, and it's all covered in with vine. Thanks for the interest. Grant
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulics - Cylinder Anatomy - by Curtis von Fange. Let’s make one more addition to our series on hydraulics. I’ve noticed a few questions in the comment section that could pertain to hydraulic cylinders so I thought we could take a short look at this real workhorse of the circuit. Cylinders are the reason for the hydraulic circuit. They take the fluid power delivered from the pump and magically change it into mechanical power. There are many types of cylinders that one might run across on a farm scenario. Each one could take a chapter in
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