[AT] DC Case + Switch From Horses to Tractor
charlie hill
charliehill at embarqmail.com
Sun Jan 15 15:41:12 PST 2012
I can't actually remember any of my family farming with mules. I know they
did and I remember the mules being around but I was too small to be in the
field and see it or at least to remember it.
My granddad on my moms side actually used a team of oxen a lot. This was
before my time but he bought a 100 acre tract of woodland and he and my two
uncles cleared it with crosscut saws and
a team of oxen. I can't imagine what a job that must have been or how
many years it took them to finish it. By the time I came along it was a
nice farm.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Bealke
Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2012 5:03 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] DC Case + Switch From Horses to Tractor
On 1/15/2012 2:25 PM, charlie hill wrote:
> Gene, my dad used to laugh about the old days when farmers here first
> started to get tractors to replace their mules.
> He said they'd do ok plowing with them until they got to the end of the
> field when the last
> thing you heard before the tractor ran off in the canal was WHOAAAA
> WHOOAAAA!
>
> Charlie
> //www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
Charlie,
The switch from horses or mules to tractors is a pregnant topic.
I remember (fondly) the last of my neighbors to trade his team, a Belgian
and Percheron, for a tractor - a Super A. He was sad for a while after
the team left - about like a feller whose dog has died.
Of course, it was absolutely the right thing to do. He was not far from
sixty, and had to work a bunch in summer to cut, rake and put up hay
from 33 acres to feed Prince and Duke the rest of the year. The 16-inch
plow they pulled was heavy as sin, and got no easier to operate with
age. I loved to occasionally go watch him plow with them as a pre-teen
and hear the roots rip as the team strained to turn the earth.
Darned if he did not get almost as attached to the Farmall. Sure wish I
had it now - he cared for it like a mother 'til he got congestive heart
failure and died.
On another topic, if you have been intimate with the embarrassment,
frustration and other vexation involved in sticking a tractor up to it's
axles, you might enjoy a link a friend sent me. It shows a Russian
tractor cousin with some kind of talent:
http://www.bangshift.com/blog/Crazy-Video-A-Massive-Russian-Kirovec-Tractor-Saves-Itself-From-Certain-Death-in-a-River.html
Chuck Bealke
Dallas
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