Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Andrew's Quiet Place



15 April 2015
Highlands Ranch, CO

My Quiet Place

A story by Andrew Hazlett (age 9)

My quiet place is a place of happiness. A place where seagulls roam above my wondering head, where warm sand calms my excited body, and all I hear is the waves lapping against the silent shore. All I feel is the soothing sand and the refreshing waters. All I see is the seagulls circling over my head and the big poofy clouds. The sun always smiles at my warm face. The beach is a wonderful quiet place where my beach chair is waiting for me.


Sunday, December 27, 2015

Frosty The Snowman by Josh


27 Dec 2015
Highlands Ranch, CO

FROSTY THE SNOWMAN


A story by Joshua Hazlett (age 8)

Once upon a time, there was a snowman named Frosty. He was very jolly. He liked to say hi to everyone he met. Everyone liked to follow him around. He was very kind.

One day, the sun came out. Frosty was allergic to the sun. All the kids were sad. So sad that they went to their houses and grabbed their money and spent it on an extra place in their houses. A place in their house where it was -50 degrees.

It was VERY cold.

So now, Frosty and the kids could play together whenever they wanted. So all the kids had to do was go to the place in their house where Frosty was.

THE END



Saturday, December 26, 2015

Ava's Art Exhibit



My granddaughter Ava (age 10) is a budding artist. I took pictures of some of her drawings to create this exhibit. Thank you Ava for this work.



Sunday, November 8, 2015

Where Do Great Ideas Come From?


Obviously not from me. This morning I fired up my computer to check my email. On Google's Home Page (in small print) was a note that the 2015 Breakthrough Prize Ceremony is tonight at 10 PM EST on the NatGeo channel. "What is this?" "Where Have I Been?"

THE BREAKTHROUGH PRIZES
The prizes were founded by Sergey Brin and Anne Wojcicki, Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan+here, Yuri and Julia Milner, Jack Ma, and Cathy Zhang. Committees of previous laureates choose the winners from candidates nominated in a process that’s online and open to the public.

Laureates receive $3 million each in prize money and a Trophy. Multiple winners are possible and the prize money is NOT split. Every winner gets a full $3 million.They attend a televised award ceremony designed to celebrate their achievements and inspire the next generation of scientists. As part of the ceremony schedule, they also engage in a program of lectures and discussions. Those that go on to make fresh discoveries remain eligible for future Breakthrough Prizes.

QUICK HISTORY
31 July 2012: The Milner Foundation launches the Fundamental Physics Prize

20 Feb 2013: Art Levinson, Sergey Brin, Anne Wojcicki, Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan and Yuri Milner launch the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences

Dec 2013: The Breakthrough Prize Foundation launches the Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics

WHY
Knowledge is humanity’s greatest asset. It defines our nature, and it will shape our future.

The body of knowledge is assembled over centuries. Yet a single mind can extend it immensely. Einstein reimagined space and time. Darwin distilled the chaos of life to a single idea. Turing figured out what it means to think.

Great scientists enrich us all. They enable technologies that ease our lives, but they also show us what’s beyond our horizons.

Science is revealing worlds far beyond the everyday scale, from the subatomic and cellular to the stellar and galactic. Increasingly we can think at these levels and trace the connections between them. And as we do, we are making progress on the truly big questions.

The disciplines that ask the biggest questions and find the deepest explanations are the fundamental sciences. The Breakthrough Prizes honor important, primarily recent, achievements in the categories of Fundamental Physics, Life Sciences, and Mathematics.

TROPHY
The Breakthrough Prize trophy was created by Olafur Eliasson. Like much of Eliasson's work, the sculpture explores the common ground between art and science.
molded into the shape of a toroid, it recalls natural forms found
from black holes and galaxies to seashells and coils of DNA


Good news: I learned something wonderful today.

Bad news: We only have basic cable so I don't get NatGeo. Now that's dumb.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

A Real Cloudburst


Grand Canyon National Park, AZ

A while back, I did a post titled Cloudburst. The photo in that post didn't even come close to capturing the grandeur of a cloudburst over the Grand Canyon. Photographer Amit Lamba came much closer.

On 29 Sep, the US National Park Service published the winners of their 5th Annual National Parks Photo Contest. A Storm Is Coming by Amit Lambda won first prize. Amit won a Tamron SP 150-600mm Di VC USD Lens (for Canon, Nikon and Sony Full-Frame and APS-C DSLR cameras; $1069 value)

"A Storm is Coming!" by photographer Amit Lambda


That is some place; that is some storm; that is some picture. Wow!

Saturday, October 10, 2015

ePostcard – Sugar Beet Harvest




Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link


Who Signs the Paycheck and How Much Is It?



American Crystal Sugar Company
Hillsboro Processing Plant
Hillsboro, ND
GPS: 47.434612, -97.062921

"American Crystal Sugar and Sidney Sugars hire over 1,300 workers stationed at 45 sugar beet receiving stations. These seasonal employees are an integral part of making yearly sugar production a great success. These short–term positions offer excellent compensation and attract applicants from all over the United States and Canada. Locals and travelers alike come to make a hefty paycheck while being able to enjoy various outdoor attractions and camp sites."

American Crystal Sugar Company contracts with Express Employment Professionals (EEP)
for approximately 1,300 additional temporary workers

We first learned about the sugar beet harvest during the summer of 2014 while workamping in Pennsylvania. Subsequently, we saw Express Employment Professionals advertisements in WorKamper News. In January 2015, EEP had a booth at the RV Show in Tampa, FL. We visited with them. Along with Pat and Herb Myers, we signed up for the 2015 harvest.

If you are interested in working the sugar beet harvest, Express Employment Professionals (EEP) are the people to contact. EEP is a national temporary help agency operated by many individual franchise owners. The franchisee for the sugar beet harvest is in Grand Forks, ND. Under the leadership of Scott Lindgren, they have been providing temporary workers to ACSC for seventeen years and their contract has just been renewed.

Here are the particulars:
Express Employment Professionals
3590 S. 42nd Street
Grand Forks, ND 58201
Phone: 701-787-5655

Related websites:
http://www.sugarbeetharvest.com Click on “Application Process”
http://www.crystalsugar.com
http://www.expresspros.com

My comments:
I was impressed with the professionalism, thoroughness, and thoughtfulness of all the EEP employees. From our first contact in Tampa in January until we closed up our rig and headed home at the end of the harvest in October, they delivered on every promise and gave an accurate portrayal of the realities of the sugar beet harvest. They did not ‘sugar coat’ anything (pun intended).

Specifically:
** They maintained telephone contact with us through the spring and summer.
** They gave us very specific instructions on arriving at the campground and where and when to report for processing.
** The campground was ready and expecting us at the appointed time.
** Our employment paperwork was ready for us, although we did have additional forms to fill out and sign.
** EEP provided a Camp Host to act as a contact for any problems and to make sure of our well-being. The camp host also provided pet walking service.
** Scott Lindgren visited us at the campground to learn of any concerns and give us some background information on the sugar beet harvest.

I will take issue with one statement in the published information quoted above.
” … being able to enjoy various outdoor attractions … “

The work day (or night) is twelve hours long. 8 to 8. Once the harvest starts, there are no days off and you cannot leave the yard during your shift. The harvest stops only for excessive heat or excessive rain. The harvest goes until the fields are empty, so the end point is uncertain. In our case, it was ten days. Veterans told us that some years it goes for a month because of weather. So I would rewrite that phrase to say:
” … being able to enjoy a shower, a meal, and sleep … “

I agree with “excellent compensation”. Base rate for a new hire Helper was $12.40 per hour
** Mon — Fri: 8 hrs at straight time; 4 hrs at 1 1/2 time
** Sat — 12 hrs at 1 1/2 time
** Sun — 12 hrs at 2 time
That works out to $1,389 per week per person.

We found the work not hard, but at our age standing on concrete for twelve hours straight took its toll and we were soon popping pain pills regularly.

Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link


American Crystal Sugar Company (ACSC)



American Crystal Sugar Company
Hillsboro Processing Plant
Hillsboro, ND
GPS: 47.434612, -97.062921


American Crystal Sugar Company (ACSC) is the sugar producer in the Red River Valley along the ND/MN border and also operates a facility in Sydney, MT serving the beet growers in the Yellowstone River Valley. ACSC is a grower cooperative.

American Crystal Sugar Company Production Facilities


In a typical harvest, ACSC will acquire 11 million tons of sugar beets. These beets will arrive at the processing plants in 550,000 truckloads, each truckload representing the harvest from one acre of farmland. The beets come from the 2,800 growers who are members of the cooperative.

The Hillsboro Factory


Our work site was the Hillsboro Factory, one of ACSC’s seven sugar beet factories. This factory was built in 1973 with major upgrades in 1997 and 1998. The Hillsboro Factory operates six piling locations: Hillsboro, Midway, Ada (north), Ada (west), Waukon, and Reynolds. We worked at the Hillsboro piling location where there are six pilers.

Here are some of the gee-whiz numbers:
Capacity: 2,500,000 tons

Average daily production: 1,425 tons

Employment: 225 year-round employees

Agricultural Information:
Number of member growers: 492
Number of acres planted: 70,757
Tons of beets processed: 1,402,421
Packaging / Warehousing
Number of different labels and products packaged: 24 labels, 4 pound packages
Hundredweight (100 pounds) packaged: 1.5 Million
Hundredweight (100 pounds) bulk shipments: 7 Million
By-products sold annually
Bulk Pulp pellets: 96,000 tons (cattle feed in USA, Europe, and Japan)
Molasses: 100,000 tons (cattle feed & fermentation)

Now you can wow your friends at cocktail parties with useless trivia until their eyes glaze over or until they go back to talking about their neighbors.

Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link


How Sweet It Is: A Look At the Sugar Industry


American Crystal Sugar Company
Hillsboro Processing Plant
Hillsboro, ND
GPS: 47.434612, -97.062921

Sugar is the most widely used sweetener in the world, with its closest substitute being high-fructose corn syrup. Other caloric sweeteners are not significant in the global sweeteners market, but their shares are rising due to increasing cases of obesity, diabetes, and growing health concerns among people.

The global market for sweeteners totaled about $76 billion in 2012 and is projected to reach nearly $97 billion by 2017. In this market, sugar holds the majority share, about 85%. The global volume of sugar consumption is rising by about 4% per year, but the market value is dictated by sugar prices, which are extremely volatile.


Sugar Beets require fertile soil and a temperate climate while sugar cane grows in a tropical climate. Production areas for sugar beets in the US are in fertile river valleys in the north. The Red River Valley supports the crop in North Dakota and Minnesota while the production in Montana and northern Wyoming comes from the Yellowstone River Valley. The North Platte River Valley is a growing area in southeast Wyoming, western Nebraska, and northeast Colorado. Growing sugar beets is done in Idaho along the Snake River Valley, and in Oregon in the Willamette River Valley.

The American sugar industry has a significant impact on the nation’s economy. The industry creates 142,000 direct and indirect jobs in 22 states and contributes $20 billion in positive economic activity each year.

Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link


Down and Dirty: Giving Back The Tare Dirt



American Crystal Sugar Company
Hillsboro Processing Plant
Hillsboro, ND
GPS: 47.434612, -97.062921

Harvesting Sugar Beets brings along dirt


Sugar beets are a root crop. Just like carrots, turnips, radishes, and potatoes, the part you want is in the dirt – not on a tree or bush. So harvesting involves dirt. Mechanical harvesters dig the beets out of the ground and throw them into a truck at a pretty high speed so a lot of dirt goes along for the ride and into the piler. This dirt is called “Tare Dirt”. American Crystal Sugar does not want the dirt, has no place to keep it, and certainly does not want to pay for it. It is part of the truck weight coming into the yard and they want it to be part of the truck weight going out.

Pilers include large cleaning devices to carry out a secondary cleaning of the beets to remove all foreign materials that made it into the piler with the beets. Beets are bounced and rolled, being scrubbed clean as they move; dirt and other foreign materials are sucked through the rolls, collected into a hopper, and returned to the truck as the last step in the receiving process.

Piler cleans off some of the dirt ...


... and that dirt is returned to the truck

By this time loose dirt is gone and the beets are “pretty clean”, but they still carry some clinging tare dirt through the piler. The beets are subject to a deduction for that tare dirt. Tare determination, sugar percentage, and sugar loss to molasses are determined based on the sample at the quality laboratory in Grand Forks.

That’s the story on Tare Dirt.

Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link


Piled High and Deep: The Story of the Sugar Beet Pile


American Crystal Sugar Company
Hillsboro Processing Plant
Hillsboro, ND
GPS: 47.434612, -97.062921

That phrase used derisively to describe a PhD surely fits a sugar beet pile. A piler is able to make piles of sugar beets over 200 feet wide at the base, and over 20 feet high, containing between 70,000 and 90,000 tons of beets. There is no angle from which I could take a picture that would capture the size of these beet piles. Maybe this diagram along with some pictures will do the job.


Compare the pile to the piler and the trucks


Looks like gravel but every particle is a sugar beet the size of a coconut


The pile grows 24/7 and the top of the boom is 30 ft above the ground


When we started, I could see the factory buildings under the stacks


Sugar beets are harvested quickly and stored up to 180 days to await processing. It is during this storage period, that sugar is lost through normal respiration. Respiration causes about 70% of sugar loss during storage, and decay accounts for 10%. The remaining 20% is the result of fermentation when the oxygen content is low because of poor ventilation, freezing and thawing cycles, and root desiccation. Storage losses caused by respiration have been controlled through the utilization of forced-air ventilation and subsequent freezing of storage piles after mid-December.

“forced-air ventilation and subsequent freezing” brings up an important part of the beet pile story and our work, but first an important side story. (I love these little adventures off into the encyclopedia to learn something new)

The Skidsteer


Darting around the Piler, like pilot fish around a shark, is a Skidsteer. The Piler could not function properly without the Skidsteer.

This Cat Skidsteer is the same as the one at our piler


Time for the information from Wikipedia
A skid loader, skid-steer loader, or skidsteer, is a small, rigid-frame, engine-powered machine with lift arms used to attach a wide variety of labor-saving tools or attachments. Many manufacturers have their own versions of this vehicle, including Kubota, Bobcat, Terex, Case, Caterpillar, Gehl Company, Hyundai, JCB, JLG, John Deere, Komatsu, LiuGong, New Holland, Volvo, and Wacker Neuson.

Skid-steer loaders are typically four-wheel vehicles with the wheels mechanically locked in synchronization on each side so the left-side drive wheels can be driven independently of the right-side drive wheels. The wheels typically have no separate steering mechanism and hold a fixed straight alignment on the body of the machine. By operating the left and right wheel pairs at different speeds, the machine turns by skidding or dragging its fixed-orientation wheels across the ground. The extremely rigid frame and strong wheel bearings prevent the torsional forces caused by this dragging motion from damaging the machine. The skid-steering vehicle is turned by generating differential velocity at the opposite sides of the vehicle. Skid-steer loaders are capable of zero-radius, "pirouette" turning, which makes them extremely maneuverable and valuable for applications that require a compact, agile loader. Skid-steer loaders are sometimes equipped with tracks in lieu of the wheels and such a vehicle is known as a multi-terrain loader.

Unlike in a conventional front loader, the lift arms in these machines are alongside the driver with the pivot points behind the driver's shoulders. Modern skid loaders have fully enclosed cabs and other features to protect the operator. Like other front loaders, it can push material from one location to another, carry material in its bucket or load material into a truck or trailer.Wikipedia

“it can push material from one location to another, carry material in its bucket or load material into a truck or trailer” and that is what it does around a piler 24 hours a day.

The Skidsteer cleans up trash around the piler. From beets spilled from the hopper because the driver dumped too fast to debris from the tare dirt dump, there is an endless stream of trash accumulating around the piler. Especially behind the piler and ahead of the pile. If this debris is not removed frequently, it will be buried in the pile.

Beets spilled by the trucks as they dump are run over by the trucks that follow, quickly covering the concrete pad with a covering of mashed beets that becomes slippery and dangerous for both trucks and workers.

The most important job for the skidsteer, and the job requiring the most skill, is laying down the culvert piping for the forced-air ventilation system.

When I first saw these sections of culvert pipe I did not understand their purpose


The Skidsteer uses this gadget to pick up pipe


The Skidsteer lays the pipe sections end to end in from each side of the pile but not completely across


The Skidsteer piles beets in front of the pipe to prevent rolling or sliding


As the pile advances, it fills in behind the culvert and buries it


The ends of the culvert pipe are connected to ventilating fans


As soon as the weather turns cold, the ventilating fans are turned on to chill then freeze the core of the pile.

Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link


One That Heaps Up: The Sugar Beet Piler


American Crystal Sugar Company
Hillsboro Processing Plant
Hillsboro, ND
GPS: 47.434612, -97.062921


Like an Octopus with tentacles everywhere, this behemoth scared the snap out of me when I first saw it. Pictures and videos did not do it justice. I had no idea what I was going to do to it or what it was going to do to me.

The dictionary says a Piler is “one that piles or heaps up; especially: one whose work is piling materials or products for storage, transportation, or processing”. Our Piler is not a person, but a huge piece of machinery used to receive truckload quantities of sugar beets delivered from the growers and pile these beets for future processing. Kringstad Ironworks manufactures these for American Crystal Sugar Company.


At the Hillsboro receiving station where we worked, there are six pilers.

In just a few minutes, a piler can digest a large truckload of beets. At a rate of about 250 tons an hour, this big guy can pile 5,000 to 6,000 tons of beets per day.


Part of the piler is a large cleaning device to carry out a secondary cleaning of the beets since the harvester has not cleaned all foreign materials from the beets in the field. The cleaning screen, known as the grab roll screen, is comprised of a slanting row of scrolled and smooth rolls. These rolls, perpendicular to the travel direction of the beets, turn at different speeds; scrolled rolls turn faster than smooth rolls. Beets are bounced and rolled through a water spray, being scrubbed clean as a result. Dirt and other foreign materials (known as Tare Dirt) fall through the rolls, are collected in a hopper, and returned to the delivery truck as the last step in the process.


The piler includes a mechanism for extracting buckets of samples from the stream of sugar beets and dropping them down a chute where we bagged them.

These samples are transported to the company laboratory in Grand Forks, ND and analyzed for sugar content. The result of this analysis becomes the basis for payment to the farmer.


Despite its size, this thing is actually a movable electric appliance. A power cord approximately 200 feet long supplies electricity at 440 volts. The operator moves the piler back as the pile builds up – typically a couple feet once every hour or so.


The crew for a piler is six (or seven) people:
** Operator
** Ass't Operator (operates the boom)
** Four Helpers (two on each side -- process trucks, collect samples, clean up)
** Skidsteer operator (usually shared by more than one piler)

This short (1:57) video was produced by Kringstad Ironworks, the piler manufacturer. It shows the piler throwing the beets to the pile, the beet truck dumping the beets into the piler, the cleaning process, the piler being moved, and finally the tare dirt being returned to the truck.

KII Sugar Beet Piler In Action


Now you know a little bit about Sugar Beet Pilers.

Posts about the Sugar Beet Harvest


FIRST DAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
Hillsboro, North Dakota, we have arrived

GETTING READY FOR WORK
Some paperwork to get us started

ON THE JOB TRAINING
A trip to the Hillsboro factory for some OJT

TEN DAYS OF WORK
Notes and pictures on our ten days of work

THE CAMPAIGN
A quick summary of the annual campaign of sugar beet processing

THE SUGAR BEET
Bigger than a coconut, smaller than a football. Here is the story on the sugar beet

THE PILER
I was very impressed with the big machine we worked on. I thought you might like to learn more.

THE SUGAR BEET PILE
How big is a pile that contains 90,000 tons? Here are some pictures and figures

DOWN AND DIRTY: GIVING BACK THE TARE DIRT
Harvesting root crops produces dirt. How to handle and dispose of it is an interesting side story

A LOOK AT THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
A $20 billion industry with 142,000 jobs in 22 states. Take a look at the Sugar Beet Industry

AMERICAN CRYSTAL SUGAR COMPANY
Get a closer look at the company providing this workamping opportunity.

EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
If you are a workamper interested in short term hard work for big bucks, here’s the link