[AT] Rock Falls, IL
Greg Hass
ghass at m3isp.com
Wed Dec 21 19:33:18 PST 2016
In our area we have used 28 or 30 inch rows since the 1920's. Because
our area has always been big in sugar beets and navy beans which are
planted in 28 or 30 inch rows, most people also planted corn the same
rather than switch the planter over for just corn. Why some 28 and some
30 inch I always wondered when young. Until I was into my teens we only
had a grain drill to plant with. My dad would always block off three
rows and and leave one open. Drills were 7 inch spacing so 4 times 7
gave 28 inch rows. When we finally got a corn planter we used 30 inch
spacings because it gives a little more room for tractors and equipment
to work. I always wondered why our area always had one row equipment
when all the magazines showed 2 row. It turns out that because most
states used wide rows, all of the early pickers, choppers, and combine
heads were only made wide row. As people changed to narrow rows,
equipment became available. In our area 99% of corn pickers were New
Idea, and during the 60's and 70's there were hundreds of narrow row
pickers in our area. As someone mentioned, I have wondered if you took a
picker into todays corn at the same speed as we used to go, if the
elevator on the picker could even handle the flow of corn.
Greg Hass
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