When I was growing up in eastern Nebraska it was my job to haul the wagons home to unload them into the crib. Our corn crib was a converted church moved to the farm in 1950. When it was converted , it had a 9 foot crib on one side and a 8 foot crib on the other side with overhead oats bins above the driveway. Ever so often the elevator spout’s bolts would come loose and we dump a couple of loads of ear corn on top of the oats. It was a pain pitching all ear corn over into the crib. The church was build in the 1880’s and is still standing on the farm. My dad always expected me to be back in time with the empty wagon before he had the current wagon filled. That was tough when he was 1/2 mile away picking. He had a pull release hitch on the picker so he pull the rope drive ahead and wait for me to pull behind him, then get off and pull the empty wagon pin get back on and move the tractor then get off to hold the wagon tongue so he back in and the release hitch would snap around the wagon pin. Then as he pulled away, I was back on the tractor to back up to hitch the full wagon which meant to get off again to put in the wagon pin. Then off for home. Due to the rolling hills we did not use gravity boxes but regular barge wagons. In the later years the wagons has hydraulic hoists under them to tilt the wagons so the corn would roll out into the elevator hopper. It was still a pain cleaning out the corners with a pitchfork. I always wished we had a wagon box that corner pins where the whole rear end of the box would swing open to clean out the corners. In the earlier years we ran the elevator with a speed jack and a tumbling rod. The speed jack ran off the belt pulley on the tractor and slowed the speed down with gears to run the elevator We fed feeder cattle in those days and ground ear corn was considered great feed as the cobs were the roughage. Even when we went to the combine in 1972 we picked ear corn until we stopped feeding cattle a few years later. We had an Allis Chalmers WD with a mounted Allis model 33 snapper picker. It did not have a husking bed. Later we went to an Allis Chalmers D17 (which we still own) with a 2 row Ford 602 picker. It did a great job of not shelling corn from the snapping rollers but the husking bed could not handle 100 bu corn. In the 1990’s sweet corn farmers from Idaho were in the area buying any ford picker they could find as the snapping unit was the best for harvesting fresh sweet corn. They took everything but the husking unit which was later sold for scrap. Harvesting ear corn was a lot of work, but we considered it a good crop year when we had to build temporary cribs out of snow fencing. The temporary cribs were called 3 ring piles as you would use 3 rolls of fencing to build the temporary crib. You needed to shell the piles before spring since the corn was either on the ground or on 12” wide wood planks. We had U shaped metal tunnels to make the temporary trough for the sheller drag. When shelling the piles often we use the tractor loader snow scoop to dump the corn into the sheller. One Spring the ground was a bit soft and the scoop picked up too much dirt which was damp. The dirt got into the theMinneapolis MOLENE 1200 sheller and plugged the sheller cage and got too full and killed the Allis D17 running it. We had to wait a few days for the dirt to dry out and clean out the cage using splat blade screw divers reaching through the access holes on the side of the sheller. Corn harvest changed in the 1970’s and now all combines and large gain bins. Not near the like in 1960’s.
I like old equipment... Its a perfect example of how they were built to last a life time .. I watch Just a Few Acres Farm & that guy tears them down to the nuts & bolts & restores them , then uses them... I think thats great...
Corn pickers are a bitter/sweet memory. We picked and cribbed all our corn in the early 60s. It is sweet to remember the times of good yields and then prepping for next year. We also walked the rows to retrieve field loss corn.. the bitter memory is of dad losing his right arm in the husking rollers of the picker. I will never forget that day in 1961.
Interesting you say that. I also have a friend with a hook arm / hand....lost it in the picker too. He still pick ear corn with that picker yet today. Hes held no grudges towards the picker. Farmers should know enough then put their hands in those places ! A lot like oiling drive chains.......people always oil the chain.... to keep the oil can from getting wrapped up in the chain...... Just oil the sprocket instead....while its running. The spinning forces the oil out to the chain..........job done ! Much safer !
Corn must be dry!! Really comes out of box good.Always helps when you don't have to get in the wagon and push wet corn out.Gee,all the kids are gone so poor OLD Mom and Dad have to work alone. Boy I miss working with my great wife on the farm!! The good OLD days!! Harvest days are some of the longest days on the farm. You get up early,do chores,pick all day,do chores late,maybe eat once that day and hit the hay dead tired 😴. Yep,fun on the farm!! Thanks 😊.
I pick ear corn at 25% . I always just put a loader full of dirt where the tires of the wagon pass by...... raising one side of the wagon. Never get on a wagon again ! When finished......remove the dirt !
I can remember back in the mid 70s GREEN GIANT IN LE SUEUR MN USED TWO ROW PICKERS ON TRACTORS !!!!! AROUND 76 THEY WENT TO THE NEW IDEA UNI HARVESTOR AND PICKED 4 ROWS !!! GREAT JOB !!!!!! DAD ❤❤❤😊😊😊
Oh the memories! We had a NI picker but husking bed was different, rollers much more exposed. We had 2 and a half wooden cribs, 30X40 to fill, plus a 100x 30 thar was retired before I started running the picker. My grandfather put up 2 bins and he and Dad bought a MF 300 with 2 row head. Meanwhile, my brother and I would fill the remaining cribs using a Case 400 on the picker, a Massey 44 to haul wagons, and a Ferguson 30 to run the elevators. We had 2 hydraulic dump wagons that replaced the old mechanical wagon lift. The fancy crib at my place had an internal elevator driven by a 3 hp electric motor and several sets of chains. It also had electric lights so we could unload at night. One big difference was that we had everything set up to save the shelled corn-no slots open on outside elevators and wire mesh lining lower 5 feet of cribs. We would grind feed as needed and shell out the rest in early summer. Fun memories but I would not want to do it again.
There’s only a few channels that if I fall asleep watching that I will go back and rewatch. This is definitely #1 on that list. Really like that corn picker.
I can remember the sound ears of corn as they hit the metal of the gravity box. so different from corn as it hits the wooden floor of the corn cribs. The nostalgia of that for me was powerful. Thank you for letting me relive a lost memory one more time.
Great video. Back in the 1960's we had a 2 row IH picker. It did not shuck the ear of corn so we did not have very much kernel loss. When I was old enough I was put in a flat bottom wooden trailer with sideboards and in one corner a scoop board was proped up against an endgate most times and my job was to throw out stalks that made their way to the trailer and I also pulled the ears into the corners of the trailer box to get as much as Dad thought the tires could handle. Fun times. Takecare folks
Spent many a day picking corn with a two row mounted picker. Can't seem to remember ever doing it in shirt sleeves though. My memories seem to be it being 20 degrees with a light snow blowing every thing around. I was surprised that you bothered to unhitch the picker from the gravity box wagon while you were down on labor. I'd have just taken the whole rig back into the yard to unload. Never liked battling backing the picker onto a wagon without someone else's eyes on the hitch to guide me in. Nice memories. We were using this kind of equipment until we sold out in 1987.
I still fill corn cribs! I grind it for feeder beef. Works great. Get in field early. No drying cost. Wire cribs do the drying free! Corn for the whole year!
The old man looks like Donald Sutherland in Kelly's Heroes commandeering the picker. I never got tired of seeing those stalks shaking down into the machinery. Picking corn was always looking for breakdowns!
As a youngster I used haul loads in listening to the Badgers. Granted they were very good in the late 80's but loved every minute of it. We had an M with a IH 234.
As a kid we had a Wood Brothers 1 row pulled with a Ford 2N, when I started farming in the 70's bought a Deer 227 mounted it on a JD A run a lot o corn thru those pickers.
If you block off half of the crib doorway with a sheet of plywood before you fill it, it will eliminate the spillage into your grinder/mixer auger. Unloading ear corn was my absolute favorite thing to do, particularly when it was good and dry. All you had to do was stand there and watch it slide out of the wagon and go up the elevator. Then drive the tractor around in the beautiful fall weather. Love the videos. You guys have a beautiful operation. Thanks for sharing!
all I know is you guys are some strong and tough guys. People in todays world have no idea how hard work is. This is 60's and 70's type of tough work. I commend you all.
I see you’re in your tee shirt! I remember picking on those nice sunny days. But I also remember having to thaw everything out in the morning before picking started. Keep those videos coming and have a safe and wonderful harvest.
Hey youngster, we must let you know Dad has moved up the ladder in the ranks for top videographer on this channel, we need to hear more from the other announcer too.
I love watching these old mounted pickers working in the field ! I grew up dodging ears of corn in the back of a wagon but I never got to run a mounted picker . My grandpa had a New Idea picker on a Farmall M but you got the Cadillac of a tractors picking lol . There is a big difference in shelling the new hybrids vs old O.P. corn . I grow a patch of O.P. corn that I have been breeding and I shell it out by hand and when we gleaned the farmers field beside us I couldn't believe how easy it came off the ear. . It just fell off with ease unlike my corn I got to fight getting off the ear . Thanks for sharing and have a great weekend !
Always enjoy your videos. Hope the yield is as good as you thought it might be. Remember Aaron showing a picture of you with the caption, 'One of the hardest working men I know'. Think you are all hard workers. Take care.
Amazing video with all the great shots from so many different angles and views. You folks really do think about how to make it real for us the viewers. I grew up on a dairy farm and remember corn picking like you are doing. The video is exactly how I remember seeing it! Love the vintage equipment too. Thank you to all who took part in the making, love you all.
Running older equipment that is paid off is one of the keys to successful small farming. I remember my Dad picking corn in the early 60's with a 2 row corn picker mounted on a Farmall 560. I even remember riding in the wagon while he picked. It was an end dump flat bottom wagon, in case you are wondering how I was able to ride in it.
This takes my back 60 years. Thanks for the memories when I was a teenager. Our neighbor did the corn picking and my job was unloading the wagons in the evening after school. I wish I could remember if my neighbor had a picker like yours or a pull behind picker. I do remember that it was late fall and really cold, some times snowing. Thanks for sharing your farm chores with me. I watch every post you do.
I love seeing the old picker in action, the operator is certainly living in the moment and is in the heart of the action. Glad to see George is wearing hearing protection, I'm sure that corn pickers are responsible for the loss of hearing for many farmers. Is it just me or does anyone else see a young George in Mason? Thanks for another great trip into the life of a small dairy farm.
Man! Wish I lived closer I would help you out! Brings back memories of helping our neighbor growing up in 70's. He picked corn with a New Idea two row picker pulled with a 1466 International. My brother and I would haul gravity wagons back and forth to the corn crib with a Farmall 400. Unloaded them into an elevator like yours. Good memories! Keep up the good work!
A small herd of beef cows would clean up any corn left behind from the picker. Our cows stand on the edge of the field just waiting for us to get the electric fence up.
That sure is a nice picking setup. I would love to have that kind of corn to run through my big Moline belt driven sheller. I enjoy you picking videos each year.
I really thank you for the wonderful memories of picking corn in the ear. My son and I were in a field yesterday that my dad and I were picking ear corn 60 years ago. We were using a Massey Harris Self Propelled picker. 2 row. Son was using a JD 8 row machine. He was shelling more in 1 hour than we would pick all day. Times have changed. Memories. Thank You and Your Family. Memories
That brings back a lot of memories then we had a uncle who would want to shell the corn on the coldest days of the year he said the corn shells cleaner.
Great video of picking and putting up ear corn. Brings back fond memories of doing this same work on an Indiana farm in the 50's when I was a kid in school. You have great weather for picking. Sure beats freezing temps and snow later in the fall. We had an Oliver mounted picker and also a New Idea pull type. The New Idea was more reliable. I watch most of your videos and love them. Keep up the good work!
Great footage. You guys sure stay hooked up running a dairy. I was raised on and still operate a beef farm, but that dairy life seems to be non stop. It’s nice to see great care and pride that you all have for your family business. Have a prosperous and safe harvest!
My favorite time of year was picking corn. All your videos bring back the best memories of my life. We had a 1 row 323 New Idea. A neighbor I helped as a kid had an Oliver mounted picker on a Super 88 Diesel. He used to open our fields along fence rows and through the middle.
Awesome video. Really enjoyed watching the old equipment working. I hay some steep hills on my property but I’ve got 4wd, you had my butt clinched side hilling with tricycle tractor 😮. Great job, stay safe and God Blees
I miss picking corn with a 2 row picker but I can remember as a young man just how many farmers that I shook hands with that were missing 2 or more fingers from using one.
Right on, that's how I always try to think of it using old smaller machines. Like you said 4 days, now if you spend all that money on a combine 4 days of the year and the other 361 sitting in a shed. At least the tractor can do more than one job. Great video, i always enjoy watching. Corn picking it's one off my favorites.
You guys have a perfect size dream farm! Man it was always a dream to have a small dairy with 40 milk cows. Now I’m 47 and it’s just merely a dream. I live my dream watching you guys, thanks for the content!
Great memories from years ago. We did not have gravity boxes, but hay wagons that we put sides on and had to shovel everything off onto the elevator. We used an old Woods one row picker and the WD45. Picking corn was usually the last harvest job that was done, and I can remember the snow flying and long days and nights.
Harvest is such a beautiful time and you all have done a wonderful job capturing it. Thank you so much for taking the time to make and share these. Please stay safe, and God bless.
Very interesting video. My non-farm experience brings back some memories of how it was done in the small town I grew up in back in the late 50's and 60's. Thanks for sharing.....
Enjoyed the video, growing up dad would mount the NI picker on our 686 just like yours. Always wanted to ride along but just wasn't safe as a young boy. We cut up the picker when i was 8 and bought a UNI to fill cribs that i eventually got to run as dad brought me wagons to and from the cribs. Usually did 8,000 bushel a year. Thanks for showing the perspectives and sounds i never got to see. 👍
I love watching corn snappers in action
Thank you! We will hear from other broadcasters and congratulate your dad on his success.
1:56..............excellent explanation of the difference in corn from when that picker was built to today's corn.
When I was growing up in eastern Nebraska it was my job to haul the wagons home to unload them into the crib. Our corn crib was a converted church moved to the farm in 1950. When it was converted , it had a 9 foot crib on one side and a 8 foot crib on the other side with overhead oats bins above the driveway. Ever so often the elevator spout’s bolts would come loose and we dump a couple of loads of ear corn on top of the oats. It was a pain pitching all ear corn over into the crib. The church was build in the 1880’s and is still standing on the farm.
My dad always expected me to be back in time with the empty wagon before he had the current wagon filled. That was tough when he was 1/2 mile away picking. He had a pull release hitch on the picker so he pull the rope drive ahead and wait for me to pull behind him, then get off and pull the empty wagon pin get back on and move the tractor then get off to hold the wagon tongue so he back in and the release hitch would snap around the wagon pin. Then as he pulled away, I was back on the tractor to back up to hitch the full wagon which meant to get off again to put in the wagon pin. Then off for home. Due to the rolling hills we did not use gravity boxes but regular barge wagons. In the later years the wagons has hydraulic hoists under them to tilt the wagons so the corn would roll out into the elevator hopper. It was still a pain cleaning out the corners with a pitchfork. I always wished we had a wagon box that corner pins where the whole rear end of the box would swing open to clean out the corners.
In the earlier years we ran the elevator with a speed jack and a tumbling rod. The speed jack ran off the belt pulley on the tractor and slowed the speed down with gears to run the elevator
We fed feeder cattle in those days and ground ear corn was considered great feed as the cobs were the roughage. Even when we went to the combine in 1972 we picked ear corn until we stopped feeding cattle a few years later.
We had an Allis Chalmers WD with a mounted Allis model 33 snapper picker. It did not have a husking bed. Later we went to an Allis Chalmers D17 (which we still own) with a 2 row Ford 602 picker. It did a great job of not shelling corn from the snapping rollers but the husking bed could not handle 100 bu corn. In the 1990’s sweet corn farmers from Idaho were in the area buying any ford picker they could find as the snapping unit was the best for harvesting fresh sweet corn. They took everything but the husking unit which was later sold for scrap.
Harvesting ear corn was a lot of work, but we considered it a good crop year when we had to build temporary cribs out of snow fencing. The temporary cribs were called 3 ring piles as you would use 3 rolls of fencing to build the temporary crib. You needed to shell the piles before spring since the corn was either on the ground or on 12” wide wood planks. We had U shaped metal tunnels to make the temporary trough for the sheller drag.
When shelling the piles often we use the tractor loader snow scoop to dump the corn into the sheller. One Spring the ground was a bit soft and the scoop picked up too much dirt which was damp. The dirt got into the theMinneapolis MOLENE 1200 sheller and plugged the sheller cage and got too full and killed the Allis D17 running it. We had to wait a few days for the dirt to dry out and clean out the cage using splat blade screw divers reaching through the access holes on the side of the sheller.
Corn harvest changed in the 1970’s and now all combines and large gain bins. Not near the like in 1960’s.
I like old equipment...
Its a perfect example of how they were built to last a life time ..
I watch Just a Few Acres Farm & that guy tears them down to the nuts & bolts & restores them , then uses them...
I think thats great...
enjoyed this much.its the way i did it in 1957 thank you
Corn pickers are a bitter/sweet memory. We picked and cribbed all our corn in the early 60s. It is sweet to remember the times of good yields and then prepping for next year. We also walked the rows to retrieve field loss corn.. the bitter memory is of dad losing his right arm in the husking rollers of the picker. I will never forget that day in 1961.
Interesting you say that. I also have a friend with a hook arm / hand....lost it in the picker too. He still pick ear corn with that picker yet today. Hes held no grudges towards the picker. Farmers should know enough then put their hands in those places ! A lot like oiling drive chains.......people always oil the chain.... to keep the oil can from getting wrapped up in the chain...... Just oil the sprocket instead....while its running. The spinning forces the oil out to the chain..........job done ! Much safer !
Corn must be dry!! Really comes out of box good.Always helps when you don't have to get in the wagon and push wet corn out.Gee,all the kids are gone so poor OLD Mom and Dad have to work alone. Boy I miss working with my great wife on the farm!! The good OLD days!! Harvest days are some of the longest days on the farm. You get up early,do chores,pick all day,do chores late,maybe eat once that day and hit the hay dead tired 😴. Yep,fun on the farm!! Thanks 😊.
I pick ear corn at 25% . I always just put a loader full of dirt where the tires of the wagon pass by...... raising one side of the wagon. Never get on a wagon again ! When finished......remove the dirt !
I can remember back in the mid 70s GREEN GIANT IN LE SUEUR MN USED TWO ROW PICKERS ON TRACTORS !!!!! AROUND 76 THEY WENT TO THE NEW IDEA UNI HARVESTOR AND PICKED 4 ROWS !!! GREAT JOB !!!!!! DAD ❤❤❤😊😊😊
Oh the memories! We had a NI picker but husking bed was different, rollers much more exposed. We had 2 and a half wooden cribs, 30X40 to fill, plus a 100x 30 thar was retired before I started running the picker. My grandfather put up 2 bins and he and Dad bought a MF 300 with 2 row head. Meanwhile, my brother and I would fill the remaining cribs using a Case 400 on the picker, a Massey 44 to haul wagons, and a Ferguson 30 to run the elevators. We had 2 hydraulic dump wagons that replaced the old mechanical wagon lift. The fancy crib at my place had an internal elevator driven by a 3 hp electric motor and several sets of chains. It also had electric lights so we could unload at night. One big difference was that we had everything set up to save the shelled corn-no slots open on outside elevators and wire mesh lining lower 5 feet of cribs. We would grind feed as needed and shell out the rest in early summer. Fun memories but I would not want to do it again.
There’s only a few channels that if I fall asleep watching that I will go back and rewatch. This is definitely #1 on that list. Really like that corn picker.
Thanks for taking the time to bring us along.
Good luck hard working American farmers, we the people of America love you and thank you for everything you do.
I really like the way you never know who's going to be doing the videos. Keeps it interesting getting different prospective on everything
George- we are jealous of the views you have while working! Beautiful.
Yup, certainly brings back memories. We used to walk up the elevator to check the top of the crib. That was a kid job that I actually liked to do.
Wow that was cool footage ..looking up the crib with corn falling..in
Another great video! Thanks!
i like seeing this style of harvesting of corn
Great job hauling in the ear corn 🌽
I can remember the sound ears of corn as they hit the metal of the gravity box. so different from corn as it hits the wooden floor of the corn cribs. The nostalgia of that for me was powerful. Thank you for letting me relive a lost memory one more time.
Love this video. Great to see old school stuff at work.
Great video. Back in the 1960's we had a 2 row IH picker. It did not shuck the ear of corn so we did not have very much kernel loss. When I was old enough I was put in a flat bottom wooden trailer with sideboards and in one corner a scoop board was proped up against an endgate most times and my job was to throw out stalks that made their way to the trailer and I also pulled the ears into the corners of the trailer box to get as much as Dad thought the tires could handle. Fun times. Takecare folks
Nice full ears . Nice to see Oly out stretching her legs . 👍 Great video What a view .
Enjoyed watching the video guy's
Nice to see the vintage Machinery still working. Dad did a great job he made some nice shots of the picker aswell.
Enjoyed watching the video guy's 😊
Spent many a day picking corn with a two row mounted picker. Can't seem to remember ever doing it in shirt sleeves though. My memories seem to be it being 20 degrees with a light snow blowing every thing around. I was surprised that you bothered to unhitch the picker from the gravity box wagon while you were down on labor. I'd have just taken the whole rig back into the yard to unload. Never liked battling backing the picker onto a wagon without someone else's eyes on the hitch to guide me in. Nice memories. We were using this kind of equipment until we sold out in 1987.
Much better than watching a 24 row head on an x9. Keep it all going.
Bravo za video. Pozdrav iz Bosnia.
Great video Gierok Farms
great video
I still fill corn cribs! I grind it for feeder beef. Works great. Get in field early. No drying cost. Wire cribs do the drying free! Corn for the whole year!
now that is the way to pick corn
The old man looks like Donald Sutherland in Kelly's Heroes commandeering the picker. I never got tired of seeing those stalks shaking down into the machinery. Picking corn was always looking for breakdowns!
As a youngster I used haul loads in listening to the Badgers. Granted they were very good in the late 80's but loved every minute of it. We had an M with a IH 234.
As a kid we had a Wood Brothers 1 row pulled with a Ford 2N, when I started farming in the 70's bought a Deer 227 mounted it on a JD A run a lot o corn thru those pickers.
Seeing all the chains on the picker. I use chainsaw bar/chain oil on all chains I find it the best. Always keep some in a door latch oil can.
George Gierok,,corn picking master class.
If you block off half of the crib doorway with a sheet of plywood before you fill it, it will eliminate the spillage into your grinder/mixer auger.
Unloading ear corn was my absolute favorite thing to do, particularly when it was good and dry. All you had to do was stand there and watch it slide out of the wagon and go up the elevator. Then drive the tractor around in the beautiful fall weather.
Love the videos. You guys have a beautiful operation. Thanks for sharing!
Great job running the corn picker and unloading the ear corn 🌽
The cows feed you so feed the cows
Love watching your I
Video. We used a 1row pull behind picker. It took awhile to get a wagon load but I loved unloading the loads.
New subscriber love the old equipment. Low inputs = mo 💵👍🤞
all I know is you guys are some strong and tough guys. People in todays world have no idea how hard work is. This is 60's and 70's type of tough work. I commend you all.
You missed the haystacking video😂
Some of the earlier mounted pickers earned the name duck feeders as they left lot on the ground.
The new idea pickers were beat or most common pickers as they had attachments fir most tractors. Many pull type pickers were used later
@@robertgrist8496would like to see hay stacking video
Just impressive and very sound business logic. Making do with the tools you have makes perfect sense.
I see you’re in your tee shirt! I remember picking on those nice sunny days. But I also remember having to thaw everything out in the morning before picking started. Keep those videos coming and have a safe and wonderful harvest.
I always enjoyed picking corn.. l had a I.H. 234 mounted picker, it was first on a Ford 4000, then l put in on a Super MTA, then a 856.
Very interesting watching you get it done with the older equipment 👍🏼
Hey youngster, we must let you know Dad has moved up the ladder in the ranks for top videographer on this channel, we need to hear more from the other announcer too.
Good morning Mary?? Glad yo hear you once in awhile too. Fresh corn in the crib is such a pretty yellow.
Mom has skills with the camera
Best times growing up as kid!! Life was so much simpler & enjoyable.
I love watching these old mounted pickers working in the field ! I grew up dodging ears of corn in the back of a wagon but I never got to run a mounted picker . My grandpa had a New Idea picker on a Farmall M but you got the Cadillac of a tractors picking lol . There is a big difference in shelling the new hybrids vs old O.P. corn . I grow a patch of O.P. corn that I have been breeding and I shell it out by hand and when we gleaned the farmers field beside us I couldn't believe how easy it came off the ear. . It just fell off with ease unlike my corn I got to fight getting off the ear . Thanks for sharing and have a great weekend !
I love hard work. I could watch it all day 😏😉
It’s great to see the old equipment at work! I also agree with your outlook on field loss! Thank you
Always enjoy your videos. Hope the yield is as good as you thought it might be. Remember Aaron showing a picture of you with the caption, 'One of the hardest working men I know'. Think you are all hard workers. Take care.
Thanks for posting
Amazing video with all the great shots from so many different angles and views. You folks really do think about how to make it real for us the viewers. I grew up on a dairy farm and remember corn picking like you are doing. The video is exactly how I remember seeing it! Love the vintage equipment too. Thank you to all who took part in the making, love you all.
Corn looks good must have had the rain you needed for this year
Running older equipment that is paid off is one of the keys to successful small farming. I remember my Dad picking corn in the early 60's with a 2 row corn picker mounted on a Farmall 560. I even remember riding in the wagon while he picked. It was an end dump flat bottom wagon, in case you are wondering how I was able to ride in it.
Brings back lot of memories. I remember some years it was sunny an warm made it enjoyable other years it was cold an windy with flurries.
This takes my back 60 years. Thanks for the memories when I was a teenager. Our neighbor did the corn picking and my job was unloading the wagons in the evening after school. I wish I could remember if my neighbor had a picker like yours or a pull behind picker. I do remember that it was late fall and really cold, some times snowing. Thanks for sharing your farm chores with me. I watch every post you do.
Love ❤your entire farming operation.
Farming diversification the way it should be.
I love seeing the old picker in action, the operator is certainly living in the moment and is in the heart of the action. Glad to see George is wearing hearing protection, I'm sure that corn pickers are responsible for the loss of hearing for many farmers. Is it just me or does anyone else see a young George in Mason? Thanks for another great trip into the life of a small dairy farm.
I really like to see the older equipment being used great video
Man! Wish I lived closer I would help you out! Brings back memories of helping our neighbor growing up in 70's. He picked corn with a New Idea two row picker pulled with a 1466 International. My brother and I would haul gravity wagons back and forth to the corn crib with a Farmall 400. Unloaded them into an elevator like yours. Good memories! Keep up the good work!
my grandpa had the same tractor 300 Farmal with the same kind of picker in 60 and 70 in ind picked 20 acres a year
Beautiful weather to be working outdoors. Picking corn in cold/blustery weather can be a challenge.
Camera work is the best. Thanks for filming.
A small herd of beef cows would clean up any corn left behind from the picker.
Our cows stand on the edge of the field just waiting for us to get the electric fence up.
That sure is a nice picking setup. I would love to have that kind of corn to run through my big Moline belt driven sheller. I enjoy you picking videos each year.
I really thank you for the wonderful memories of picking corn in the ear. My son and I were in a field yesterday that my dad and I were picking ear corn 60 years ago. We were using a Massey Harris Self Propelled picker. 2 row. Son was using a JD 8 row machine. He was shelling more in 1 hour than we would pick all day. Times have changed. Memories. Thank You and Your Family. Memories
Hey guys,,some really great footage. Keep it up!!
Good to see the mom and dad team
That brings back a lot of memories then we had a uncle who would want to shell the corn on the coldest days of the year he said the corn shells cleaner.
Great video of picking and putting up ear corn. Brings back fond memories of doing this same work on an Indiana farm in the 50's when I was a kid in school. You have great weather for picking. Sure beats freezing temps and snow later in the fall. We had an Oliver mounted picker and also a New Idea pull type. The New Idea was more reliable. I watch most of your videos and love them. Keep up the good work!
Great footage. You guys sure stay hooked up running a dairy. I was raised on and still operate a beef farm, but that dairy life seems to be non stop. It’s nice to see great care and pride that you all have for your family business. Have a prosperous and safe harvest!
Growing up on the dairy farm I always felt we were always behind because of the work involved with it but I sure do miss it
My favorite time of year was picking corn. All your videos bring back the best memories of my life. We had a 1 row 323 New Idea. A neighbor I helped as a kid had an Oliver mounted picker on a Super 88 Diesel. He used to open our fields along fence rows and through the middle.
I see Owen’s contract security service is keeping a watchful eye on the property. aka the ducks. They are looking great.
Awesome video. Really enjoyed watching the old equipment working. I hay some steep hills on my property but I’ve got 4wd, you had my butt clinched side hilling with tricycle tractor 😮. Great job, stay safe and God Blees
I miss picking corn with a 2 row picker but I can remember as a young man just how many farmers that I shook hands with that were missing 2 or more fingers from using one.
Thanks for the ride along.
Right on, that's how I always try to think of it using old smaller machines. Like you said 4 days, now if you spend all that money on a combine 4 days of the year and the other 361 sitting in a shed. At least the tractor can do more than one job. Great video, i always enjoy watching. Corn picking it's one off my favorites.
Great video, nice looking corn for a dry year. Love the different angle shots, like I'm there.
I love the camera work and angles you use to make your videos. Great stuff. Also love the farming content!
Yeehaw what a great harvest year keep up the great work y’all
You guys have a perfect size dream farm! Man it was always a dream to have a small dairy with 40 milk cows. Now I’m 47 and it’s just merely a dream. I live my dream watching you guys, thanks for the content!
This video has blown up! Good job man ... very cool to see this old-school approach
Great memories from years ago. We did not have gravity boxes, but hay wagons that we put sides on and had to shovel everything off onto the elevator. We used an old Woods one row picker and the WD45. Picking corn was usually the last harvest job that was done, and I can remember the snow flying and long days and nights.
Harvest is such a beautiful time and you all have done a wonderful job capturing it. Thank you so much for taking the time to make and share these. Please stay safe, and God bless.
Great video!!
It's always a pleasure watching you work your machinery , little nuggets of wisdom , all good stuff . Great video 👍🇬🇧
Very cool video
Great job love the equipment you guys are one great family
Very interesting video. My non-farm experience brings back some memories of how it was done in the small town I grew up in back in the late 50's and 60's. Thanks for sharing.....
We just got done picking in Pennsylvania here we picked 15 loads year with our pull behind two row narrow row
I wish I could work on your farm and help out. Love watching your videos. 🙂
ear corn makes the best cow feed there is nothing will compare to it
Enjoyed the video, growing up dad would mount the NI picker on our 686 just like yours. Always wanted to ride along but just wasn't safe as a young boy. We cut up the picker when i was 8 and bought a UNI to fill cribs that i eventually got to run as dad brought me wagons to and from the cribs. Usually did 8,000 bushel a year. Thanks for showing the perspectives and sounds i never got to see. 👍
Can’t wait to see the fall colors 🍻🇺🇸