[AT] Grain Augers--Long
john hall
jtchall at nc.rr.com
Sun Jan 1 06:30:19 PST 2012
Now that's a country TV station if there ever was one!
John Hall
----- Original Message -----
From: "charlie hill" <charliehill at embarqmail.com>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Sunday, January 01, 2012 8:27 AM
Subject: Re: [AT] Grain Augers--Long
> Al, if I remember right my dad wanted to have his tobacco "layed by"
> (last
> plowing because of it's size) by the first of June and normally started to
> harvest by the first week in July. July 4th was NOT a holiday we often
> celebrated! The harvest typically took 6 weeks and the old guys would
> tell
> you if you didn't have your crop out of the field by mid August "the worms
> would eat it up". Even though we had DDT and some other strong
> pesticides
> back then, tobacco worms and other bug pests seemed to be a worse problem
> back then than they are now. Maybe it's just because I'm not on the farm
> to
> see it now. I bet you don't remember when a guy named "Eck" Wall did a
> daily tobacco report on channel 9. He reported total sales volume in
> Greenville and other surrounding market towns, the sales volume and
> average
> sales price and he'd usually have a bunch (bundle) of tobacco from the
> highest sale price pile in the Greenville market (that was in the days
> when
> tobacco was still graded and tied in bunches with a wrapper leaf). He had
> a
> clothes line in the TV Studio and he'd say "and you can hang that one on
> the
> line!" as he put the record sale price bundle over the line. For those
> that
> have never seen it, the bunch of leaves were separated apart in the middle
> and put over the string with the stems, tied by the wrapper leaf, hanging
> over the top of the line so that it sat there much like an old fashion
> wooden clothes pin. By the end of the season he'd have tobacco bunches
> half
> way across the set on "the line". Back then there were almost NO
> industrial jobs in eastern NC. The few industrial plants we had were
> either tobacco processing or other farm related industries. Tobacco was
> KING and everyone knew it. A tobacco farmer was respected as a community
> leader much the same way as a small business owner is now.
>
> Charlie
>
>
>
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