Farming has always trended towards larger and larger farms. In the 1880s farmers couldn't believe how many acres a team of mules with a steel plow could cover and a reaper could harvest - the old days of a wooden plow and using a scythe were over. In the 1920s tractors allowed a single farmer to cover land that used to support 4 or 5 family farms just a few years earlier. In the 1980s a single farmer could farm the land that supported 4-5 family farms just a generation earlier. In the 2000s a single farmer could cover the same acres that supported 4-5 family farms in the 1980s.
In 20 years people will look at the early part of this century as the "good ole days".
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Today's Featured Article - Listening to Your Tractor - by Curtis Von Fange. Years ago there was a TV show about a talking car. Unless you are from another planet, physically or otherwise, I don’t think our internal combustion buddies will talk and tell us their problems. But, on the other hand, there is a secret language that our mechanical companions readily do speak. It is an interesting form of communication that involves all the senses of the listener. In this series we are going to investigate and learn the basic rudimentary skills of understanding this lingo.
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