[AT] Strange modification
Ron Cook
rlcook at longlines.com
Wed May 12 09:09:07 PDT 2010
Some folks have more money than brains.
Ron Cook
charliehill wrote:
> A motor grader is about the strongest pulling machine you'll run up with.
> Back in the late 70's a fellow named Malcolm McClain sold out his Charlotte
> NC based trucking business and dumped a lot of the cash into a huge farm in
> N/E NC. Well actually it was a pocosin. He cleared it and began making it
> into farm land. The soil was so acid that they were putting 10 or 12 tons
> of lime to the acre on cutover and root raked land just to get the roots to
> rot. I was one of the truckers that hauled the lime to the place.
>
> The roads on the place were nothing but 2 deep canals dug about 50 or more
> feet apart with all of the dirt piled in the middle and graded out into a
> roadway. The canals were deep and wide enough to bury a tractor trailer in.
> It wasn't unusual to get stuck with a loaded tractor-trailer dump right in
> the middle of the main field roads and getting stuck on the side roads was
> almost a daily occurance. (Now I'm getting to the part about the motor
> grader if anyone is still reading).
>
> They had a couple of special Cat graders spread out over the 100,000 acre
> tract. They would send them to the areas where we were hauling lime. They
> had been fitted with rear wheels that were over twice as wide and not much
> over half as tall as normal grader wheels. That is what pulled us out most
> of the time and most of the time they did a fine job and they were fast.
> They'd pull a group of us through a tough spot in the road. Then as a group
> we'd go another couple of miles and get stuck again. By the time we got the
> road blocked up good the grader would catch up with us and pull us all out
> again.
>
> Most of the time that worked. When we really got stuck bad, usually while
> we were trying to dump, they would send D-8 Cats to pull us out. That is
> assuming we were able to dump first. If not the lime had to be shoveled out
> of the dump bed. Otherwise the dozer would pull the tractor and trailer out
> but leave the trailer axles or part of them in the bog. Occasionally one
> side of the trailer wheels would sink while we were dumping. That would
> turn the trailer over and since most of us ran aluminum trailers the were
> usually totaled or darn near it. Most of us pulled 22' Ravens trailers.
> Anything longer was nearly impossible to dump in the field without turning
> over.
>
> I think they finally got about 35 or 40 thousand acres into farmable
> condition. The place was called First Colony Farm and it stretched over
> part of 4 counties between Hwys. US 64, NC 32 and US 264, east and south of
> Plymouth NC. The farm tracts were eventually sold off to various farmers
> and investors. There were probably 25 or more trucks hauling lime from as
> far as 150 miles away, 6 and sometimes 7 days a week for a couple of years.
> We were running from 4 am until 8 or 9 at night everyday. The limiting
> factor was getting the lime mine operators to stay open for us after hours.
>
> Charlie Hill
>
>
>
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