[AT] new duties

Kenneth Gene Waugh gwaugh at wowway.com
Sun Jul 9 12:29:00 PDT 2017


Boy, John, your words brought back childhood memories, first half of the 1950s, when we lived in the country outside of Raleigh, North Carolina.  We lived right next to a farmer who grew tobacco, and your talk of the tobacco barns and curing brought back those aromas of over 50 years ago!!  And I was only in grade school at the time!

What farming background I have is through my grandparents and other relatives in NE Indiana – and yes, your definition of barn and shed coincides with what I remember being used…

Gene Waugh
Elgin, Illinois



Sent from Mail for Windows 10

From: John Hall
Sent: Sunday, July 9, 2017 1:54 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] new duties


Here is a twist for you Ralph, tobacco is cured in a barn. It was 150 
years ago and is today, but the size and styles have changed greatly. 
Originally they were square log structures, maybe 20 ft sq. For the last 
45-50 years they are metal buildings about 8 wide, 10 high and 30-40' 
long. At least this applies to the majority of tobacco farming (flue 
cured). The air cured burley tobacco is cured in very loosely boarded 
"barns"--that is up in David and maybe Spencer's neck of the woods.

I know Charlie can give more specifics.

By the way, all of our equipment is parked under sheds. The barn was 
built for the cows and horses and storing hay and straw. It does have a 
shed built on the west side that I park my old 55 Deere combine under 
and my IH corn planter.

Ralph, I think your summation of a barn is what the MAJORITY of barn 
owners would describe. I see "barn" being used a lot to describe some 
garage packages offered by builders.

John Hall

On 7/7/2017 10:49 AM, Ralph Goff wrote:
> On 7/4/2017 3:36 PM, Indiana Robinson wrote:
>>> Barns are a whole other ball game...  :-
>>>
>>>
>>> Rambling again...
>>> A "barn" to me is a wooden farm building usually either timber frame,
>>> balloon framed or I also include the small dairy barns that almost always
>>> have a gambrel or cyclone roof around here.
>>>
>    I have a problem with how the term "barn" has been mis used so much in
> the media lately. To me a barn was only for
> animals. Be they cattle, chickens or horses. You might occasionally park
> a tractor in a barn but you don't store your
> antique cars and trucks in a barn. As so many shows and videos like to
> use the term "barn find" it has become viral.
> I keep my vehicles and machinery in a shed or garage. Animals go in a
> barn. Just my opinion and I expect I am in the minority
> as usual.
>
> Ralph in Sask.
>

_______________________________________________
AT mailing list
http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at




More information about the AT mailing list