HyMarkHigh

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, 10 August 2013

Almost Dinner Time

Posted on 05:46 by Unknown
It won't be long until a few hundred people descend on our farm for Dinner in the Fields.  This morning we woke up to rain, fog, no tents, and no one working.  We got so jittery thinking about what if we were in charge, we went out for breakfast far away from the farm.  That was a good idea!

I found this cute little Kinze 2000 double framed planter on Cedric Surber's farm that will be auctioned off in two weeks.  There is a Winkle in the Surber family history somewhere.  The planter was sold new as a 38 inch corn planter with 19 inch soybean splitter rows.  It has two liquid tanks with a John Blue pump that would neat for putting down calcium nitrate beside the row.  Matt Winkle found it and it would make him a nice planter, too.

There are 4 Olivers selling too, if anyone is interested.  There is a 1755 diesel, 1750, 770 and 77 gas tractors.  You know how I like Oliver's.

When we got back from breakfast and scouting, the tent was up, the food was ready to put out and cook and the fires were going.  So we really didn't have any worries, this their fifth annual dinner and their volunteer crew know what they are doing.  I don't know where they are going to park 100 cars on this farmstead but I am not going to worry about it.  It rained 1.6 inches just north of us and 2.6 just south of us.  We got .4 so our sod is still pretty firm.  I hate ruts, especially if I have to mow over them.

There was Froggy Fisher I pulled against over 30 years ago.  There was Jeff Murphy, where Rich Werner kept his daughter's 4-H pigs.  The list of local people I've met and not seen in years goes on and on!

I am pleased my sister is coming from Gallia County and our 3 children and their families are coming as far away as Cleveland.  It is emotional to think where we came from and what our parents and grandparents would think of this.  I think we have accomplished a little of just what they dreamed of.  We don't take that lightly.

We thought about how hard they all worked to make a living farming without the technology we enjoy today.  LuAnn's family dug potatoes and my family raised livestock.  We come from long lines of very hard workers.

I need to go get some pictures for this blog and for our history but it is dark again like it is going to rain.  It is supposed to fair up by dinner time.

Ed
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • "Won't Be Missed"
    LuAnn kept reminding me the world would go on without me when I was anxious to check email or Crop Talk last month.  She was right.  I got h...
  • So God Made An Ag Teacher
    "If God made a farmer, it couldn’t have been too long after that he realized he needed an Ag Teacher. He must have realized that he nee...
  • Sign of the Heart
    A neighbor and I were talking last week and he told me about mowing Canada Thistle in the sign of the heart and the weeds dying.  I looked i...
  • Ohio Agriculture
    Ty Higgins at Ohio Country Journal put together a nice YouTube about Ohio Agriculture , Behind the Scenes.  Take a look at it and learn more...
  • Entropy
    " Glyphosate’s Suppression of Cytochrome P450 Enzymes and Amino Acid Biosynthesis by the Gut Microbiome: Pathways to Modern Diseases A...
  • Quiet
    It is so peaceful and quiet here this morning.  I can't remember the last time the snow covered the ground here but it's been a coup...
  • 100,000 BTU's
    I think my brain got tired of hearing the winds howling outside and my nose started to get cold so here I am up bright and early firing the ...
  • Nodulation
    Legume nodulation is not well understood.  Word processors don't even recognize the word nodulate.  Definition:  to cause the formation ...
  • 100 Today
    " Today my dad turned 100 . He was born a mile North of where I live on the family homestead. He is the oldest of 6 children. He has on...
  • Ship Soybeans By Air?
    Really?  How could this be cost competitive??? "Turkish farms grow wheat, peaches, pomegranate, figs, chick peas, lentils, nectarines...

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (257)
    • ►  September (20)
    • ▼  August (31)
      • Cover Crop Vaccine
      • What Harvest?
      • $800 Cruise
      • Crop Tour 8/26/13
      • Holy Cow, What A Haul!
      • When Moms Talk Back
      • Two Million Bikers
      • Mule, Gator or Ranger?
      • Why China’s farming sector is failing
      • Brown Revolution
      • Ancient agriculture
      • Renewable Fuel Standard
      • Radish Powered Garden
      • Farmers Talking Markets
      • Is Soy Really A Good Food?
      • Vinegar On Soybeans
      • Fall Fertilizer
      • 118 Bushel Soybeans
      • Dr. Richard Cooper
      • Emily Elizabeth Winkle
      • Very Good Dinner
      • Almost Dinner Time
      • Rhizopogon
      • Meals In The Fields
      • 36 Bushels?
      • Quick Test For Goss's Wilt
      • The Pig Of Pampering And Prayer
      • Nodulation
      • Apex
      • What Truck Do You Drive?
      • Ohio Agriculture
    • ►  July (31)
    • ►  June (30)
    • ►  May (31)
    • ►  April (29)
    • ►  March (30)
    • ►  February (23)
    • ►  January (32)
  • ►  2012 (43)
    • ►  December (31)
    • ►  November (12)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile