[AT] Re Plowing in Ohio/Long
John Hall
jthall at worldnet.att.net
Sun Sep 16 18:33:51 PDT 2007
Little Bull?!?! Now thats a real tractor if it's one of those oddballs from
the '20's I'm thinking about.. Don't suppose the family has any pictures of
it in use? Sounds like your grandad was full of great farming tales!
John
----- Original Message -----
From: <Edchainsaw at aol.com>
To: <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 16, 2007 3:50 PM
Subject: [AT] Re Plowing in Ohio/Long
>
> In a message dated 9/15/2007 12:06:54 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
> at-request at lists.antique-tractor.com writes:
>
> [AT] Plowing in Ohio/Long
>
>
> As a kid we plowed every inch of ground we planted -- so I was put on
> a
> plow as soon as I could be trusted-- 3 plows were always faster than 2.
> We farm near a small river and our sand was the easiest to plow-- I
> loved
> it exept when you let one wheel spin more than 1 round without
> moving...
> I almost rolled a 4630 JD over into the old river bed that day...
> most of the ground is Zip-muck and sandy loam mix you would go from
> 5mph to 7 mph to 4 all in one pass.
>
> The one field is 3/4 mile long --- grampa told us when he plowed with
> horses he could plow all day and still jump over the land when he
> quit for
> the night. He saw it all in his time -- when he started working on the
> farm they did have a tractor --- a LITTLE BULL tractor. They
> went
> back to horses during the 20's and when he last plowed in 1980 we
> were
> using a 4430 and 5bottom plow and then before he died in 1999 he saw
> us go
> to no-tilling.
>
> My Dad could set up a plow well and from using the ac-CA, and a
> MF135
> they are a lot alike hitch wise but I was a lot safer on the 135.
>
>
>
>
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