Spam/Phish> Re: [AT] Towing
charlie hill
chill8 at cox.net
Sun Sep 3 10:26:02 PDT 2006
David, most of the small farmers have gone out of business since the end of
the quota system. Now there are just a few large farmers farming all of
those small farms. Also, a lot of the larger farmers got out of the
business so some of that mechanical equipment was on the market a couple of
years ago at good prices. However, the prices of some of it and the bulk
curing barns (for flue cured tobacco) have gone sky high in the last year or
so because no one is manufacturing the stuff now.
Tobacco, as you might know but others may not, is now grown on contract with
the tobacco companies much the same way as citrus and vegetable crops.
That guy must have been a smooth driver! I used to play around when I was
pulling 3 or 4 behind a tractor. One little shake of the wheel that would
only make the tractor move a few inches would translate into a major whip in
the last trailer. I can't imagine what would happen with 20!
By the way, some of the central and eastern NC farmers are trying their
hand at burley tobacco now and I hear there are folks trying to grow 2 crops
a year in Texas.
Charlie
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Bruce" <davidbruce at yadtel.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 03, 2006 12:56 PM
Subject: Re: Spam/Phish> Re: [AT] Towing
> Hey Charlie,
> I'm sure the running gear was manufactured - I've seen several of those
> "without clothes". I even rode one of those older harvesters years ago -
> I couldn't really see the advantage of using one in our small fields over
> the traditional "walking method". Years ago I saw a pick up pulling a
> "train" of these "trailers" (about 20 or so) down a county road. Glad I
> didn't meet him in another vehicle <g>.
> I noticed this year the new mechanical harvesters around here this year.
> Previously they weren't used here because of the smaller fields - the
> economics must have changed because the field size surely didn't <g>.
> David
> NW NC
>
> charlie hill wrote:
>> Hi David, we had some like that here too. I almost believe those were
>> manufactured or at least started out that way and were copied. We
>> started seeing them about the time we started seeing the first
>> "harvesters" not the new, automatic mechanical harvesters we have now but
>> the old ones that several people rode on that had the big chain drive
>> front wheel and usually a Wisconsin engine pulling it.
>>
>> Charlie
>>
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