[AT] Old work boots ramble
Michael Miller
sweetcorn70 at hotmail.com
Sat Oct 9 18:55:34 PDT 2004
George,
For a price I could find a home for that M for a while...
Mike
>From: "George Willer" <gwill at toast.net>
>Reply-To: Antique tractor email discussion group
><at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>Subject: Re: [AT] Old work boots ramble
>Date: Sat, 9 Oct 2004 21:14:28 -0400
>
>Dean,
>
>You've described a barn from my past that I really miss. My current one I
>built when we re-located is much larger, but can't compare for style. A
>major difference is that the earlier one was visible from the family room,
>while the sheet metal box is not visible from the house at all. BTW... the
>M is one tractor that has to remain outside because the barn is full.
>
>http://members.toast.net/gwill/album/Misc/barn.jpg
>
>Well done! Please keep sharing your dreams.
>
>George Willer
>
>----- Original Message ----- From: "Dean Vinson" <vinsond at voyager.net>
>To: <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>Sent: Saturday, October 09, 2004 6:22 PM
>Subject: [AT] Old work boots ramble
>
>
>>Spent several hours trimming trees and cleaning out gutters today, the
>>kind of chore for which I dig out my old leather boots. Over the course
>>of many trips back and forth across the yard, dragging tree branches to a
>>big pile that will supply indoor kindling and outdoor bonfires over the
>>next few months, I noticed that much of the yard is pretty rough looking.
>>Bare spots, dips from where I'd burned out some stumps but never really
>>filled it back in right, weedy places. "Maybe I could buy something small
>>like a Super C, and find a rear-mounted tiller for it," I thought to
>>myself.
>>
>>The northwest corner of the yard is where the barn would go, the one where
>>I'd keep the Super M (and I guess the Super C, too, as long as I'm
>>daydreaming). Probably keep the bikes and lawnmower and extension ladder
>>and such in there also, I suppose, but mostly it'd be a barn. I'd have to
>>build it myself to keep the cost down and because I'd need it to be an
>>honest barn rather than one of those pretend things I see out in front of
>>the Home Depot. Have to have a pretty high door to clear the muffler on
>>the Super M, and of course some good workspace, so it'd end up being
>>pretty big. I'd have to add some barn details, maybe a haymow door up
>>high. I'd wear my old leather boots while I built it.
>>
>>Right now the woodpile is on that spot. Not this summer but each of the
>>two before, we had a crew thin out the trees in the back yard and cut down
>>some dead ones from the front, maybe 20 total, decent-sized, 6" to 12" in
>>diameter I guess. The crew ground the tops into mulch and cut the wood
>>into fireplace length for us, and by now I've got all but a little bit of
>>it split. That's a job for the leather boots, and while I split I
>>remember splitting with my dad and loading wood into the old two-wheel
>>wagon, hooked to Dad's '48 Case. We just had the one wagon, so it hauled
>>everything. Kids, manure, firewood, fertilizer, seed, hoes and rakes.
>>Pumpkins and corn and tomatoes.
>>
>>Somewhere in those years as a teenager my feet found a comfortable size
>>and settled down in it, and I didn't outgrow the BiltRite Huron crepe
>>soled leather workboots that I'd gotten somewhere along the way. They
>>were with me when we baled hay with the Rosenberger's down the road, and
>>when I painted the Ross's barns, and when we fixed the fenceline. They
>>were cold and wet and later stiff on days when I should have chosen the
>>rubber knee-highs instead, but they were warm and clean and felt good on
>>evenings when we looked back on an empty hayfield and a full
>>sweet-smelling barn.
>>
>>Most of the years since then, 27 or 28 I guess, haven't seen me often in
>>the field. Now and then the boots still come out, soles too smooth but
>>okay for what little I ask of them. The tops seem unchanged, soft and
>>light brown up high by the little brass ears that I wrap the last few
>>turns of the laces around, but down low the bits of roofing tar, flecks of
>>paint, anonymous scuffs and nicks blend into the deep gray-brown of
>>history. Such a plain thing, these boots, but they remember, and they
>>wait with me. They keep faith while my work years are filled with desks
>>and talking and thinking and writing, while too many bills leave too
>>little left, while toy tractors on my desk and tractor shows in the
>>summer, and dreamed-of backyard barns unbuilt, fill in for the life of my
>>past and future.
>>
>> Dean Vinson -- Dayton Ohio
>><http://my.voyager.net/~vinsond/>
>>
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