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TRACTOR TRIVIA and other interesting stuff! 1/14/2024

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953 nut

The Corn Binder

 

When early farmers harvested corn they would either pick the ears for shelling or shock the stalks and remove ears at a later time. By the 1890's most farmers had a corn binder which allowed them to harvest corn without having to cut the stalks by hand. The corn binder put the corn into sheaves and farmers would then put them into shocks.

Much like the grain binder the corn binder cut the stalks, bundled them and placed the bundles on the ground to be picked up.

Once the bundles of corn stalks were in the thrashing room the ears were removed from the stalks and the corn stalks were chopped and added to silage for feeding cattle. The ears of corn would then be stored in a corn crib.

A book on silage. Silage. .%^.. FIG. 57. A PRACTICAL, VERTICAL, CORN  BINDER. knife was passing away, and as if this implement that has figured  so long will soon be relegated

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Handy Don

As a kid, I visited my great uncle’s farm in IL. He had a big screen-sided bin holding ears of dried corn that he fed to his chickens and hogs. No cattle on his farm.

I was much more interested in the what-seemed-to-me-gigantic IH tractor which we were forbidden to climb on.

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953 nut
2 hours ago, Handy Don said:

I was much more interested in the what-seemed-to-me-gigantic IH tractor

Even as a kid you had a hankerin to get on a tractor, me too.

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