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Richard Wahlstrand

Another perspective

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Pullstart

One month ago…

 

Huge foundation to driving safely!

 

 

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JoeM

Memories and tools to build on. 

I was so lucky to have a father that really never discouraged anything.  Had an old mower that would not run, dig into it he would say, see what you can find. Then he would help. 

I used the same reinforcement for my kids. I give the old man credit, sometimes it was tough and I was hoping they didn't make matters worse. But our youth, and for the matter people, just want a chance.

Now it is the grand kids turn. 

 

TJ was 7 at the 2019 show

I going to ride even if it is raining!

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I trailed him and he ran that thing till there was no more fuel! :)

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ebinmaine

My own beginnings with Garden Tractors go back to my maternal "Grammy and Grampa".

The local dealer to them was IHC Cub Cadet equipment. 

They had a yellow and white tractor back in the 70s and traded that in for a red Cub Cadet (682,782?) around 1980. 

 

My own history with Wheelhorse in particular goes back only to fall 2016.

Trina and I needed a physically heavier machine for pulling heavy stuff. 

 

Sooooooooo many usages and at least 20+ Tractors have gone through our shop since. 

 

Nowadays we consider our Wheelhorses and implements to be a permanent part of our tool set for our lives. 

 

Memories? Many! Some challenging. ALL good. 

 

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SylvanLakeWH

Memories are what it's all about...

 

My brother gifted my son the C-105 for his lawn and snow business in 2015... off to college a few years later so dad took over the :wh: duties...

 

 

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Retired Wrencher
1 hour ago, ebinmaine said:

My own beginnings with Garden Tractors go back to my maternal "Grammy and Grampa".

The local dealer to them was IHC Cub Cadet equipment. 

They had a yellow and white tractor back in the 70s and traded that in for a red Cub Cadet (682,782?) around 1980. 

 

My own history with Wheelhorse in particular goes back only to fall 2016.

Trina and I needed a physically heavier machine for pulling heavy stuff. 

 

Sooooooooo many usages and at least 20+ Tractors have gone through our shop since. 

 

Nowadays we consider our Wheelhorses and implements to be a permanent part of our tool set for our lives. 

 

Memories? Many! Some challenging. ALL good. 

 

Nicely said Eric.

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Retired Wrencher

Richard: I like your post. It shows the love of tractors Red or Green. Enjoy the ride.

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WHX??

 

23 hours ago, Richard Wahlstrand said:

, the machines are tools, big boy toys, hobbies, therapies and possibly more.

 

Teaching aids for the younguns for all things. Mechanics, math, physics, and many more...

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WHGuy413
Posted (edited)

Love this post. I have made many memories working on these tractors in my garage with friends but the best ones are watching my son get really into them. A few years ago life tossed me a major curveball and I stopped working on and even using tractors. I had no interest in going out to the garage even. But he was the driving force to get me back out into the garage and I’m thankful for that. The memories we have made out there are incredible. He’s gone from driving mine when he was little to owning 1 to probably zeroing in on double digits if he hasn’t already gotten there now. He has gained knowledge of how things work and can do pretty much do it all. I look forward to the texts when he gets home from school and I’m still at work saying “dad I’m going to the garage” or “dad I got my (insert latest project here) running”. He’s a hard working 13 year old that has a passion for wheel horses. He pays for his addiction to them with hard work fixing push mowers and selling them with the skills he has learned in the garage. I hope he can take these skills into what ever the future holds for him.

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JoeM

Hard to beat!

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The smile say it all

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