Ohhhh man!! Talk about a formula for misery! Growing up in West Texas, we fed-out lots of steers and lambs and my dad grew forage sorghum--not corn--for roughage. The sorghum, and sometimes red-top cane, was harvested with a "row binder" (more correctly known as a corn binder, but, of course, we were not harvesting corn!) Then the fun really began: first drag those heavy green bundles together to form the shock. The first four were stood on their butts and put together by "inter-digitating" (like locking your 10 fingers together) the tops of the bundles, usually containing heads full of sorghum grain. Then you would stand and lean bundles all around until you had a shock. Next, after a couple of weeks of drying in the shocks, the bundles were loaded onto wagons, hauled to the stack yard, off-loaded and stacked. Building a stack that would stand up and shed water is REALLY a lost art. Next, you drag the bundles out of the stack, run them through a Letz forage grinder and blow it into a bin. And, finally, you would get to handle it once more when you would haul it out to the troughs to feed the critters. One saving grace (maybe the only one) was that they really liked it, especially with molasses dribbled over it.
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Today's Featured Article - Harvestin Hay: The Early Years (Part 2) - by Pat Browning. The summer of 1950 was the start of a new era in farming for our family. I was thirteen, and Kathy (my oldest sister) was seven. At this age, I believed tractor farming was the only way, hot stuff -- and given a chance I probably would have used the tractor, Dad's first, a 1936 Model "A" John Deere, to go bring in the cows! And I think Dad was ready for some automation too. And so it was that we acquired a good, used J. I. Case, wire tie hay baler. In addition to a person to drive th
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