Thanks, Eric, EYE alwaz new mi skoolin wud hep mi sumday! Mi potatografy clas heped two. ;v) Ma always did accuse me of drinking away the last of my senses. I concur. I injured my back, quit drinking & started small-time farming in my spare time. Sometimes, I just don't learn! LOL! Seriously, though, I would truely go crazy if it weren't for the hobby farming & model train layout in the basement. I won't take a desk job & I'm not going to sit around all day "livin' off o-ther peoples taxes". I would start scratchin' at the wallpaper & talkin' to the lights. No thanks!
The farm in the background is the family farm. My Mother's side of the family originated about a 1/4 mile down the road. My Grandparents married in '40 & lived in Milwaukee until '42. My Great-grandfather already owned the farm & let them move in to settle down into a farm life. While living in Milwaukee, my Grandpa picked up the A.O. Smith job. Before that, he poured silos for an outfit out of Beaver Dam(?). I also recall hearing a tale about a certain someone, hanging on for dear life under a 'shine truck. Back in the "other" Great Depression, Mr. Capone had quite a few stills & barrels hiding in the neighborhood.
My grandparents started with cows, pigs, horses & chickens. They got rid of the horses in the '50s & the cows in the mid '60s (not sure about the chickens), shortly before my Great-grandfather passed. If I remember, milk wasnt paying enough to keep 15 - 20 head at the time & Grandpa was sick & tired of getting bit by one of the ornery horses. They stuck with the pigs until the mid '70s. They got a mean case of distemper in the barn & lost all 82 pigs & a bunch of piglets in under two weeks. Whatever it was, it killed off all but two cats & the dog didn't last the summer. After that, Grandpa bought the 560, a mower-conditioner setup identical to mine (minus the fast hitch) & a slightly used 400 Cyclo-Air planter. He used the planter to put in sweet corn, on one-half the farm, for the cannery. The mower-conditioner was used to make cash hay on the other half.
1986 was a sad year for me. The world had just lost IH & Allis Chalmers & my Grandpa rented out the entire farm to a neighbor. The 560 & planter were the first to go. The rest of the machines followed suit until my Grandparents passed in '94. By then, all that was left was the H & a few unsaleable machines. I got the H on behalf of my Mother. She used one of her "picks", when they divvied up the farm, to secure the H for me. The remnant machinery was mine to do what I want with. My youngest Aunt currently lives there.
I would like to interject a moment of my youth at this point. I spent any & every minute, that I could spare in my childhood, enjoying time with my Grandparents & roaming through-out the barn & shed. I was always up to something. Endless hours of sitting on the 8N, "driving" all over creation. The H at that time was a big tractor to me & couldn't wait to be big enough to handle such a beast. I remember I got scolded once, at the ripe old age of 7, for taking the manure spreader apart. I managed to get the front wheels off by the time my Grandma found out what I was up to. "You put those back before Dad catches you!!", I can hear it like it was yesterday. I put them back. Then I proceeded to start taking the rear beaters off (they weren't out front where I could be seen). Uh-oh! Someone told Grandpa I was up to no good.
"I thought you took the wheels off", he grumped.
"I did & put them back", I quipped.
"Well, what are you doing to the beaters, then?".
"Uh, putting them back together?".
"Hmph, I thought so & don't let me catch you doing it again".
"OK!"
I don't think I've turned a wrench that fast in a long time. I even cleaned he pig "eggs' off of the beaters. All in time to wash up & eat dinner. Quietly.
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Today's Featured Article - When Push Comes to Shove - by Dave Patterson. When I was a “kid” (still am to a deree) about two I guess, my parents couldn’t find me one day. They were horrified (we lived by the railroad), my mother thought the worst: "He’s been run over by a train, he’s gone forever!" Where did they find me? Perched up on the seat of the tractor. I’d probably plowed about 3000 acres (in my head anyway) by the time they found me. This is where my love for tractors started and has only gotten worse in my tender 50 yrs on this “green planet”. I’m par
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