A Treatise on Grain Stacking / Instructions how to Properly Stack all kinds of Grain, so as to preserve in the best possible manner for Threshing and Market. - John N. De Lamater - Book

A Treatise on Grain Stacking / Instructions how to Properly Stack all kinds of Grain, so as to preserve in the best possible manner for Threshing and Market.

Production Notes
BY JOHN N. DeLAMATER.
NORWALK, O.: The Norwalk Chronicle Print. 1884.
Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1884, By JOHN N. DeLAMATER, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D.C.
So far as I am aware, this is an untried field of labor—a pioneer work which I have had under consideration for the last fifteen years; during which time the closest attention has been given to details of building, and careful observations made on results, when the stacks were being taken down.
JOHN N. DeLAMATER.
PLACING FOUNDATION.
If convenient, make a foundation of rails, by placing three rails about four and one-half feet apart and parallel, and then add half or two thirds the length of a rail to each, and cover by laying rails crossways, and finish by laying a large rail or post in the center lengthways.
This will form a foundation large enough for ten or twelve large loads. If rails, poles or boards cannot be had for an entire foundation, endeavor to get something to support the heads of a few center sheaves; for if sheaves are set on end to commence a stack, the middle is apt to settle too much.
COMMENCING TO BUILD.
On the rail foundation, lay around the center in the form of an ellipse, with the heads lapping well across the center rail; lap half and continue to lay towards the outside until foundation is covered. Now commence at the outside and lay a course around, neither laying out or drawing in, except to correct any little error that may occur in the elliptical form of the stack; complete the courses to the center, but don't fill the middle too full; if the outside is lower than the middle, lay a double course around outside; keep your stack flat —full as high at outside as center; build the first load straight up, neither laying out or drawing in, if the stack is to contain ten or twelve loads; if eight or nine, lay the last course out a little.
LAYING OUT.

John N. De Lamater
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О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2010-12-07

Темы

Grain

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