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Sailman

What will become of the wheel horse collections?

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Sailman

I might be stirring the pot or whacking a hornets nest but here goes.......I would like to know what the folks on this site with these incredible wheel horse collections plan to do with them in the future?? It just seems to me the "younger generation" don't have much interest or appreciation for the things we have all found great joy in restoring and using. I am amazed at what folks on this site have done with restorations, mods, etc. and am curious where all these fine machines will go in the future? :confusion-confused:

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Gasaholic

I rather suspect there will almost always be a wheel horse collector out there - demand may drop (thus value of collection), some may eventually go to museums (New museums pop up all the time)  Many of them are actually still in daily regular use , Many of the poorer non-museum quality machines may become parts machines, and finally, those that don't make it to those categories may either just be parked in a barn to rust away, sent to a scrap yard, or just taken and beat to death by the new owner that doesn't appreciate what they have compared to what is available these days.. but I suspect it'll probably be beyond any of our lifetimes before they become a mostly forgotten machine (Like the Panzer, which I rarely ever see any more, but I used to have one!... or the Reo.. - I had a walk behind pushmower Reo mower once, too...) 

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WHGuy413

Just hope that the next generation has people involved. It’s one of the reasons I have @WheelHorse_Kid in the garage so much. He loves them. I just hope he always has a soft spot for them as he grows up.

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lynnmor

Just think about the cars you had a half century ago, where are they?  Yep, on the scrap heap.  There will be survivors just like cars, but my opinion is that in the future most WH owners will destroy them using their usual neglect and abuse.  I have some good offspring and look at their history of little interest in preserving what they have and I can see my herd will not last.  So watch for my obituary and get right over here when the time comes.

Edited by lynnmor
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Pullstart

I just hope my kids will at least appreciate that there is value and keep them out of scrap!

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Ed Kennell
1 hour ago, lynnmor said:

So watch for my obituary and get right over here when the time comes.

Hey neighbor,  let me know when I should check the obits.     :rolleyes:

 

We should all probably select a WH executor  to insure Red Square members are informed of estate sales.

Edited by Ed Kennell
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ebinmaine
1 minute ago, Ed Kennell said:

Hey neighbor,  let me know when I should check the obits.     :rolleyes:

I'm thinking Lyn won't know when he's part of the obits. :lol:

Just ask him daily. 

Any answer. You wait. 

No answer. Head over....

 

2 hours ago, Sailman said:

...I would like to know what the folks on this site with these incredible wheel horse collections plan to do with them in the future??

 

All of whatever Trina and I have goes to Trina's daughter and her husband. 

I believe they'll keep some. Maybe all. 

 

Cogitate carefully on this:

Your Wheelhorse collection is yours because you wanted it. 

Everyone has their own likes, desires and the opposites. 

 

Enjoy it while YOU can. 

 

"Will"  it properly and legally to the person(s) YOU want to steward the collection after it's no longer your own. 

 

That's the best we can do.  

 

 

 

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SylvanLakeWH
55 minutes ago, Pullstart said:

I just hope my kids will at least appreciate that there is value and keep them out of scrap!

 

They better, because when the time comes, Mrs. Sylvan will be contacting you to come over and "inherit" the whole train etc... (Bring cash...) :D

 

May need to rename it though... :eusa-think:

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Handy Don

I expect I’ll have only one left, the one I use for mowing, towing, etc. Two have already been distributed to eager owners and the Lawn Ranger I expect to have ready for sale in the coming months.

I’ve already made sure someone has my Red Square credentials so they can post whatever they deem necessary.

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lynnmor

My wife and I have one of the largest collections of peanut butter glasses in the world so we attend auctions where many are being sold.  When we look around the room there are very few, if any, young folks there.  We have noticed that only the very rare glasses are increasing in value while the rest are actually dropping.  This tells me that new collectors are few.  These glasses were primarily produced in the 1950s so only those that remember buying them care, later generations are happy to toss containers and tell you how green they are.  Look up “peanut butter glasses” on fleabay if you want to know what I am talking about.  Again, watch for my obituary and get the glasses before they are used for target practice.

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Rob J.

I’m prolly the oddball here. My kids could care less. I’m at 11 now and I’m having to build shelves to store them all. Making room as they say. Most of my tractors were rescues that I’ve tried to put back to OEM mechanically sound status. I have a couple of “redone” ones but unless I do the work I don’t feel right for some reason and I don’t have the skills that some of you do. So not many will be “redone”. Not sure if that will hurt over all value I suspect not. My plan is to donate some of the rarer ones to a museum(s). I’ll just have to research the more sound museums cause my wish is for them to be enjoyed by many future generations. I’ll sell off some if I get a chance but will get the donated ones in order soon. It will help when my herd quits breeding though. Gitty up, Cheers!

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Pullstart
48 minutes ago, squonk said:

I keep hearing this loud humming noise since this thread started. I finally figured out it's the gears spinning in @Pullstart's head. :rolleyes:

 

@rjg854 and I have an agreement. Who ever bites the big one first, the other helps the widow deal with the aftermath. Randy can have all the spare parts he wants. The rest is to be taken to the show and dumped into Waldo's Volvo when he aint lookin! :lol:


This is ugly.  I feel like dejavu is going on right now, like we just recently had this conversation.  I’m gonna go away now, but if anyone finds my number in their wife’s speed dial… it’s not for a good time! :lol:

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SylvanLakeWH
37 minutes ago, Pullstart said:

but if anyone finds my number in their wife’s speed dial… it’s not for a good time! :lol:

 

My wife knows @Pullstart in my phone is short for "all things Wheel Horse"... only caveat is that if any of my herd end up in Cheese-land, better be in @Achto or @WHX?? garages... :ph34r:

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kpinnc
7 hours ago, Sailman said:

I am amazed at what folks on this site have done with restorations, mods, etc. and am curious where all these fine machines will go in the future?

 

Call me an optimist- but I think "kids" reach an age where what didn't matter yesterday begins to do just that. At least this is how it happened with me. I thought old stuff was neat when I was 20, but had no real interest until my grandfather passed. Then suddenly all the old stuff that he constantly spoke of as "don't make 'em like that anymore" reminded me of all the memories of him. He never owned a Wheel Horse, but he always worked on stuff and built stuff. Even today when I get greasy or covered in red paint, it makes me smile remembering him.

 

So I don't enjoy this hobby only because of him, but he influenced me greatly. I believe that some kids today will gain interest in the future. 

 

And the collectors of the past are why we still have so many of these tractors today as well. Of course the build quality contributed too... :rolleyes:

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Pullstart
11 minutes ago, kpinnc said:

 

Call me an optimist- but I think "kids" reach an age where what didn't matter yesterday begins to do just that. At least this is how it happened with me. I thought old stuff was neat when I was 20, but had no real interest until my grandfather passed. Then suddenly all the old stuff that he constantly spoke of as "don't make 'em like that anymore" reminded me of all the memories of him. He never owned a Wheel Horse, but he always worked on stuff and built stuff. Even today when I get greasy or covered in red paint, it makes me smile remembering him.

 

So I don't enjoy this hobby only because of him, but he influenced me greatly. I believe that some kids today will gain interest in the future. 

 

And the collectors of the past are why we still have so many of these tractors today as well. Of course the build quality contributed too... :rolleyes:

 

I’ll even admit, in my teens I shared a barn with an old guy and his “old mowers” and couldn’t figure out why he messed around with all that old junk.  Oh, how I wish I could pick Earl’s brain today…

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Beap52

When I retired a few weeks ago, I off-loaded all of the tools from my truck after working 52 years, I had a lump in my throat because some of those tools I have used since trade school.  Hand saws, (yes I still carried one on my truck) chisels (some of them worn away to about half of what they were when I got them in 1970) and other tools are now in my shop.  These tools will mean nothing to my son-in-law or grandsons.  They are just not something they are interested in.  My tools, cars, lawn tractor, train set,  basically stuff that I have invested many an hour in will likely be sold.  My brother-in-law and I have talked some about our "stuff" and we've decided that most of what we have has served us and that little, if any, of it has an historical significance that will warrant it to being saved for future generations.  I'd like to live another ten or fifteen years but sooner or later this body will will serve it's purpose and then I'll move on.

 

I began thinking about stuff a couple of years ago when an older gentleman in his 70's wrote on a model railroad site that I visit occasionally that he was dismantling his beautiful layout. He no longer could crawl under his train layout to attend to it.  There was quite a discussion about donating it, selling the individual buildings and ultimately the gentleman said that the train was for his enjoyment and he wanted to be the one relive the memories of his time in his train room while he put it in a dumpster.   We all have our own way of dealing with our stuff be it Wheel Horses, model trains or peanut butter glasses. 

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Ed Kennell
2 hours ago, squonk said:

be taken to the show and dumped into Waldo's Volvo when he aint lookin! 

Save room for 10 -15   buckets of WH junque.

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elcamino/wheelhorse

Why you guys picking on me , I have my piles of WH parts and tractors to get rid of . I'll leave them to my granddaughters so my son will have something to do and not contact you turkeys. Messing with @squonk will go into over drive.. 

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