Tag: Farming

Picture of the Day for August 10, 2013

The wheat and oats are ripening and you can see combines in the fields but once in a while you can see an image from the past.

Typically, grain binders, invented in 1872, were most common in the humid Midwest where the grain dried unevenly, and it was necessary to have additional drying before it was threshed. Early grain binders were all ground-driven and pulled by a team of horses around the field. As the horses pulled the grain binder forward, the driving wheel was rotated, which powered the sickle and reel of the grain binder. As the reel rotated, it bent the grain stalks inward towards the sickle, and the sickle cut the grain stalks off a few inches above the ground. A cloth canvas then conveyed the grain to a gear driven knotter which tied several stalks together into a small bundle. After the grain bundle was tied, it slid onto the bundle carrier, and was dropped onto the field. Following close behind, field workers picked up the tied grain bundles and placed several of them together to form a small shock. The grain bundles were placed in shocks so that the unripened grain would have a chance to dry, and so that they would easily shed water if they were rained on.

Grain Binder

Grain Binder

Picture of the Day for April 19, 2013

It is getting very old looking at snow falling like it is again today! I rather look at old machinery like this old potato planter. But this potato planter would have trouble planting through the snow and I bet your butt would get rather chilly on the metal seat since it is below freezing outside.

There is an old wives’ tale that planting potatoes should always be done on Good Friday which would have encountered a frozen ground this year. The tradition of Good Friday planting seems to originate in Ireland. The potato came from an area around Peru and came to Europe about 1570 but took a while for the potato to catch on. In the 19th century, many Irish Protestants refused to eat potatoes on the grounds that they weren’t mentioned in the Bible. Irish Catholics skirted the issue by planting them on Good Friday, thereby baptizing the little spuds and making them holy.

But now every Irish man, woman and child eats more than 250 pounds of them each year. I must have some unknown Irish ancestor since I love potatoes too. The planting of potatoes have changed over the years. The International Harvester General Catalog published in 1927 had this McCormick-Deering One-Row Potato Planter listed on page 193. The horse-drawn planter could hold 3 bushels in the hopper and the planter weighed 580 pounds and could have an additional fertilizer attachment.

Old Potato Planter

Old Potato Planter

Picture of the Day for March 28, 2013

When clearing a heavy snowfall, sometimes it is hard to figure out where the driveway is so today I could actually see some lawn after the melting yesterday since I cleared some snow off the lawn instead of the driveway. But the lawn is brown and no green showing. Sometimes it is even hard to find green on a old rusty tractor and you have to search to find it.

Finding the Green

Finding the Green

Picture of the Day for February 22, 2013

Scientists in Scotland announced the July 1996 birth of the world’s first successfully cloned mammal, Dolly the sheep, on February 22, 1997. Even though Dolly was not the first animal to be cloned, she gained attention in the media because she was the first to be cloned from an adult cell.

I always figured if they were going to clone a sheep, they could have picked a nicer looking breed of sheep than a Finn Dorset or one of the rare Scottish breeds, like the Boreray as it is the most endangered breed of sheep in the United Kingdom.

Cloning is even less profitable than normal ranching since it took 277 attempts to get Dolly but researchers have tried cloning extinct animals and may open doors for saving endangered and newly extinct species by resurrecting them from frozen tissue.

I just hope that doesn’t mean any Tyrannosaurus rex will show up in my backyard since I have enough trouble with the bears destroying my bird feeders!

Grazing Sheep

Grazing Sheep