[AT] The last question I had on my list for December.
Gene Waugh
GWaugh at wowway.com
Thu Dec 31 20:36:58 PST 2009
Where most of my baling experience was done, the terrain was flat enough
to pull a wagon directly behind the baler---but one of the highlights of
my youth was baling for a cousin's grandfather---hilly part of the
county, too small to bother with a wagon behind the baler. We picked up
the bales with a team of horses pulling the wagon---what a treat!!!
He (the grandfather) was a widower; when his wife died, he just reverted
to the old ways. This was the only time that I was actually in a field
working with horses.
I do remember, as a little kid, a draft horse or two at my grandfather's
farm, but they were no longer working. The first tractor on this farm
was an unstyled JD G---1937, IIRC. DAMN, I wish I had that tractor!
Farmer's theme is 'what we enjoyed the most'; "I became a MAN" on that
G; I still remember the day I first managed to spin that freakin
flywheel enough---closed the compression petcock on one side,
jumped/crawled underneath and closed the other! THAT was the day!!!
Gene--- these memories are wonderful!
David Myers wrote:
> Gene, even though it does not come under the absolute definition of tractor operation, I can TOTALLY understand what you felt. Humping bales that were as large as me (I was kinda small), the constant thumping of the baler, that fantastic new-mown hay smell, wow! I lived for the chance to go help make hay.
> David
>
> --- On Thu, 12/31/09, Gene Waugh <GWaugh at wowway.com> wrote:
>
> BUT...OMG,
>
>> how I remember stacking hay in the top of the barn in
>> midwest summer
>> heat and humidity!!!!! Most people CANNOT comprehend
>> what a treat it
>> was for me to be on the wagon behind the baler, stacking
>> bales. But it
>> was a TREAT!!
>>
>
>
>
>
>
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