In north AL and southern middle TN probably 70% of the people left growing cotton have a roller picker. Saves a lot of time and man power. There is less loss in the rolls verses modules. There is a lot more cost up front but everyone around me that has them says as long as they are growing cotton they will never go back to a basket picker.
I saw the ad in the Furrow also. The best way I can explain the two is this. A picker tries to do just that. Pick just the cotton off of the plant and nothing else. You always have some trash in a picker but not a great deal. The stripper gathers everything off of the plant. A lot more trash in stripper cotton. When a stipper is done there is not much more than a stalk and some short branches left. That is probably not the best description but I hope it helps some.
There are some pictures I posted and others posted last year on this page of rolls feeding in the gin and being moved in the field.
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Today's Featured Article - A Cautionary Tale - by Ian Minshull. In the early 1950s my father bought an Allis Chalmers B and I used it for all the row crop work with the mangolds and potatoes, rolling and the haymaking on our farm. The farm and the Allis were sold and I have spent a lifetime working on farms throughout the country. I promised myself that one day I would own an Allis. That time event
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