[AT] A day off
Dean VP
deanvp at att.net
Mon Oct 9 20:17:32 PDT 2017
Thanks for the memories. I think the first time I was ever allowed to driver a tractor was when the men were loading Oats bundles, taken from standing shock's on to a bundle wagon. I was tasked with keeping the tractor alongside the row of shocks aa the men loaded the bundles on the wagon. No stopping or starting just a measured speed at which the men could keep up. I think I was allowed to not only steer but to change the throttle as needed to keep the proper pace. I do not know now how old I was at the time but I suspect it was well under 10 years of age. I do remember not being able to stop as I wasn't strong enough to pull the clutch lever and my feet would not reach the brake pedals. But I knew how to turn corners as necessary and the land was relatively flat. I suspect I was kind of slow turning around but that gave the men a little break. I'm thinking 6 or 7 yr's old maybe. I was on top of the world on that tractor and had come of age. My Mother told of an instance where she was driving a tractor in the barn yard, she never did so I don't know why she was, and was inadvertently headed into a haystack and panicked. I guess I was between her legs on the tractor and somehow had the wherewithal to pull the clutch. I have no recollection of this so I had to be quite young.
Dean VP
Snohomish, WA 98290
-----Original Message-----
From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com [mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of Kenneth Gene Waugh
Sent: Monday, October 9, 2017 2:24 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Subject: Re: [AT] A day off
Yes, John, thanks for your recollections! As I age, memories become more and more important. Memories of sights, sounds, the odors you speak of. A couple of my favorites are my grandfather’s unstyled 37 JD G and the old radial aircraft engines.
I “became a man” at the age of 10 - 11 when I got that G started by myself the first time!!! I still remember scooting under it to close the far-side compression release petcock rather than walking around it.
Yes, thanks for your memories!
Gene Waugh
Elgin, IL
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 8, 2017, at 7:32 PM, John Hall <jtchall at nc.rr.com> wrote:
>
> Not exactly antique tractor related, but old/antique tractors are all
> we have to use,so....
>
> We have been blessed(and cursed) with a dry fall. Obviously made for
> great harvest weather. I only waited 1 or 2 days for corn to dry after
> a shower of rain, other than that we have been busy doing something
> every day here on the farm. As I began, all the machinery here is
> old--2 working tractors date to the 40's, the newest is a 1972 IH 454.
> In addition to harvesting and hauling corn, we ground up all the
> stalks, cut and square baled the hay, and reseeded the hay fields as well.
> Yesterday I put away the bushog, hay rake, combine, and sickle mower.
> Earlier in the week we put away the tedder and the baler. Got the
> offset harrow hooked up so I can cut some corn stalks in the
> ground--fortunately its going to rain this week and soften the ground.
> We'll only harrow the fields I'll sow wheat on--the rest can wait till
> March.
>
> The older I get the more I am appreciative of my farming memories.
> One you don't think about often is the great smells of the crops. This
> afternoon the hay we baled last week had a really strong aroma to it.
> Most of the smell of the corn fields has subsided, but I remember one
> Sat night we came in from going to eat supper and rode to the back to
> check on the combine (always scared of fire). The moment I opened the
> truck door, the smell of fresh combined corn would take your breath. I
> ventured back 35 years to playing in the back of a grain truck while
> it slowly dumped the corn into the dryer (no danger of getting caught
> in an auger). Last fall my son and cousins boy were goofing around in
> the truck wile I was cutting corn. Nothing like watching kids make
> their own fun.
>
> To top off the weekend, I would up on the Vintage Aerial website,
> searching for photos of our farm over the years. I found one from the
> fall of 1990. There, right in front of the houses was parked the
> family's 4430 Deere with offset harrow and grain drill hooked behind it.
> Evidently it was just "swinging by" the house while moving between
> farms planting wheat. I probably should order me a copy of that photo,
> as the next year the real farming operation was shut down and most of
> the equipment was auctioned off.
>
> Sorry for the ramble, the list just seems a little quiet. I have
> plenty of needed tractor repairs to chat about over the winter.
>
> John Hall
>
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