Back in the mid '60's Meerschaum Pipe Company in Washington, MO manufactured corncob pipes. The corn had white kernels and had a larger circumference which meant the cob also had a larger circumference which was better suited for a pipe bowl. The company would contract with farmers to grow the corn and then the company would come out to the farm and bring along a special corn sheller (similar to this one) but it was special in that it damaged the cob less. They then bought the cobs from the farmer and the farmer kept the grain. My dad grew for them for several years.
Brings back memories. Dad had 2 Minneapolis Molines. Fed 2 wire cribs, 1 wooden corn crib, and a pile on the ground. Any corn left in July got shelled and brought to town in 300 bu Walsh wagons pulled by a Farmall M. No skid loaders at that time. Anyone who had a White Sheller was rich!!😂😂. Football team was made of Farm Boys at that time!
Had a friend had a truck mounted sheller and all the cribs in our area ha a trough in the middle with boards over it as the bin emptied you removed the boards. hard work and usually a mumber of rats at the end of each bin. Thank you for the memories. in the 20s my grandfather had a horse drawn threshing machine he took to different farms for wheat threshing.
Our Dad had a John Deere sheller that he did custom shelling with. We didn’t need to wonder what we were going to foe the summer, there was always lots of shoveling.
When we ran our Minneapolis Moline corn sheller we hooked up a nylon/plastic flex tube to the husker and blew the husks into an old metal hog farrowing hut. Made it so much easier to catch all the husks.
Very cool setup! I love that you still use corn cribs and run a seller. I may have to get a brochure for that 1210! More farm videos would be great! Hot stuff right now. It'll get you to 10k no issues.
Big daddy, like a dairy farmer once told me, "after an honest days work on a farm, ya get an honest days sleep at night". Now as I say, I'm no farmer, and I'm sure that saying goes for ALL farmers.....Feeding this country ya are...Be well....
Nuts to see how for we've come with our technology in farming. Back in my grandpa's day he did this and then ran a model A gleaner. He thought that was legit. Today we have a combine that can adjust itself its nuts
I had the same sheller, but, it was a bit older, so, it was a MM. But, i had build cribs, that were long, tall and narrow, covered by a roof and space between for tractor storage. I used the drags that would pull the corn into the sheller. It was a lot of labor, but, i did not have to dry the corn. It worked okay when you only had a hundred acres or so, but, it would be hard to do with the way they grow it today. I had a big New Idea super picker, and, it worked pretty good, but, that was back in the day when 150 bushel corn was a very top yield.
jim here. boy gitin it done old school cool. I get a little scared when I go up a ramp or when I am putting my skid loader on my trailer. seems like you are tilting back too far. granny was in there right with ya, go granny go. justsayin GOD BLESS
Nice operation. Wondering what ya do with the leftover cobbs? Like to find someone on the east coast that shelves corn. Like to try a load of cobbs n my outdoor furnace. Thanks
Big Daddy I need you to make an emergency run to Washington with a load of those cobs there's a whole slew of politicians that need something to wipe their ass with
With picked corn you leve it in the crip and let it dry so no cost for drying and then they use the cobs for bedding and they burn them for heat so nothing goes to waste
The corn sheller they are using was actually the last step before combines started being used. The advantage of picking corn and then shelling is the drying cost is eliminated.
A lot of work & time, Thank you for Farming.
Thank you
I really like all your videos i love farming🐓🦃🐐🐴
Back in the mid '60's Meerschaum Pipe Company in Washington, MO manufactured corncob pipes. The corn had white kernels and had a larger circumference which meant the cob also had a larger circumference which was better suited for a pipe bowl. The company would contract with farmers to grow the corn and then the company would come out to the farm and bring along a special corn sheller (similar to this one) but it was special in that it damaged the cob less. They then bought the cobs from the farmer and the farmer kept the grain. My dad grew for them for several years.
thanks for sharing
Now the snowman dressing company is the only one left buying corn cobs.................
Brings back memories.
Dad had 2 Minneapolis Molines.
Fed 2 wire cribs, 1 wooden corn crib, and a pile on the ground. Any corn left in July got shelled and brought to town in 300 bu Walsh wagons pulled by a Farmall M. No skid loaders at that time. Anyone who had a White Sheller was rich!!😂😂. Football team was made of Farm Boys at that time!
have a good day
Had a friend had a truck mounted sheller and all the cribs in our area ha a trough in the middle with boards over it as the bin emptied you removed the boards. hard work and usually a mumber of rats at the end of each bin. Thank you for the memories. in the 20s my grandfather had a horse drawn threshing machine he took to different farms for wheat threshing.
Very cool!
Our Dad had a John Deere sheller that he did custom shelling with. We didn’t need to wonder what we were going to foe the summer, there was always lots of shoveling.
I bet so
That's neat to see. I can remember my grandpa having bins like that for his corn. I was to young to see how he did it so neat to see.
glad you liked it
@@Bigdaddy1992. Yes very interesting now I have kinda a idea how my grandpa may have done something similar.
First time I have ever seen that. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching!
I've never seen so much Corn in my life at one Location. It's amazing.
stay around for more
And what did they buy the cobs for?
One of the coolest slickest set ups I’ve ever seen awesome 🇺🇸👍🙏
thanks
Love your ramp so cool.
thank you
When we ran our Minneapolis Moline corn sheller we hooked up a nylon/plastic flex tube to the husker and blew the husks into an old metal hog farrowing hut. Made it so much easier to catch all the husks.
thanks for the info
I remember using a hand crank sheller from the turn of the century as a kid!
we have one
I used to help my cousin every August shell with a MM sheller with a long drag line ,we ran the cobs in spreaders for bedding in polebarns.
we use them for bedding and heat
I sure remember those shelling days. Great video!
thanks
I love the corn harvest. Loved this video. :-)
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@Bigdaddy1992. что это за машина
Very cool setup! I love that you still use corn cribs and run a seller. I may have to get a brochure for that 1210! More farm videos would be great! Hot stuff right now. It'll get you to 10k no issues.
I see farm videos are
Very interesting I love the way they handle it
Thanks for watching
Awesome video, brings back memories of then I was on the farm using gravity wagons and an elevator to fill corn cribs!!!
thanks for watching
Big daddy, like a dairy farmer once told me, "after an honest days work on a farm, ya get an honest days sleep at night". Now as I say, I'm no farmer, and I'm sure that saying goes for ALL farmers.....Feeding this country ya are...Be well....
that's true thanks
We used to have corn cob fights throwing them at each other , and we would put fire crackers in the ends and toss them like granades.
lol sounds like a fun time
Thats beatiful i love country life 🙏
thank you
Remember All Those Round Corn Cribs,Plus Always Putting Ear Corn Ware You Can Best Time Of The Year
yup
Terry I agree! One of the best times of the year seeing them cribs full of golden ear corn !
Great video!
Drying corn on the cob is a great way to dry it if you got enough room!
yes it is
Nuts to see how for we've come with our technology in farming. Back in my grandpa's day he did this and then ran a model A gleaner. He thought that was legit. Today we have a combine that can adjust itself its nuts
yes you are right thanks for watching
I remember going to my uncle farm in Iowa and playing on the cob piles in the 50’s.
cool
Interesting operation. I've never seen that done before.
Thanks for watching!
Very cool piece of history there, lot of modern equipment involved but still keeping some old iron alive, 😀
thanks
Should think about adding small square baler to the mix, baling up those husks for cattle feed.
they use them for bedding
reminds me of child hood we picked ear corn with a 2 or3 row picker cant remember put in corn cribs, ah the good old days
cool
enjoyed this.dont see shelling and cob,s any more
we do it every year
I had the same sheller, but, it was a bit older, so, it was a MM. But, i had build cribs, that were long, tall and narrow, covered by a roof and space between for tractor storage. I used the drags that would pull the corn into the sheller. It was a lot of labor, but, i did not have to dry the corn. It worked okay when you only had a hundred acres or so, but, it would be hard to do with the way they grow it today. I had a big New Idea super picker, and, it worked pretty good, but, that was back in the day when 150 bushel corn was a very top yield.
Danny has a drive threw crib but he dose not put corn in it
Good outfit!
Glad you like it!
Cool to watch. I only see corn fields from the road .
thanks
My bro-in-law has a similar setup. He just grows enough corn for his own animals.
that's cool
Nice truck ford :)
yes
Very nice work!
Thank you! Cheers!
wow this i like so much from looking, maybe i can help you one day.
cool
Awesome Modern Technology Agriculture
thanks
Old School Way To Get It Done
yes
enjoyed the video
thanks
amazing
Thank you! Cheers!
Do more of this it is Cool to watch
I did more next week
Работа в удовольствие!сколько так можно обмолотить интересно
thanks
Good SwiftKey 🎉
hi
Old school way nice
Probably cheaper than buying a combines and grain carts and tractors and dryers lol
they have them
@Acer Acres they do both they use cobs as heat for the farm.
th-cam.com/video/Y1GviM_sius/w-d-xo.html
@Acer Acres awesome its not the best video we are going to do a better one soon
Hard at work take care God Bless
Thanks, you too!
That makes quick work of it
yup
Looks like y’all got a long way to go.
we are done now
jim here. boy gitin it done old school cool. I get a little scared when I go up a ramp or when I am putting my skid loader on my trailer. seems like you are tilting back too far. granny was in there right with ya, go granny go. justsayin GOD BLESS
me to
Nice video please upload more videos
I have this year. more coming
thumbs up shared a few days work forsure
Much appreciated
Good job we use those cobs to fire the bbq you will be amazed how hot they burn
cool
I love to work this kind of farm so amazing🙏🙏
Yes, thanks
Old process, but they have fine tuned it into an efficient operation.
thank you
I remember this done with nothing but horse and man power. 🇺🇸
yes
Is the black pipe in the crib perforated so you can hook up a dryer?
you could
those large black pipes/hoses sticking out of the bins....are those for better ventilation or you use them to "treat" corn against moth or weevil?
they are for ventilation
It's cool just surprised people still do corn this way ya can buy a combine and make money custom harvesting
still do
I remember crawling under the crib and climbing the vent pipe ,,just a little kid doing stupid things
good old days
👍👌🇨🇦❤, new sub, gr8 video
Thanks and welcome
Labor intensive, but a lot cheaper than trying to buy a combine. At least you can fix that equipment yourself.
yup
Nice operation. Wondering what ya do with the leftover cobbs? Like to find someone on the east coast that shelves corn. Like to try a load of cobbs n my outdoor furnace. Thanks
Danny has a furnace they grind them and burn them
Never knew that white built a cornsheller.
yup
White bought out Minneapolis-Moline. Same shellers. White bought out Oliver.
👍👍👍👍👍
thanks
Parabéns muito ☺☺☺
thank you
Next time we have a toilet paper shortage you could make a killing selling those cobs
yup
Big Daddy I need you to make an emergency run to Washington with a load of those cobs there's a whole slew of politicians that need something to wipe their ass with
Won’t need any TP for awhile.😎😎😎
lol
I farm. More worried about beer than TP with the covid thing!
Americans you are feeding the world .
yes
What do you do with all the husk and plant debris? do you collect and compost them and put it back into the cornfield ?
cobs we use them for heat everything else is bedding then compost
@@Bigdaddy1992. а зачем собирать початки когда можно их обмолотить комбайном сразу в поле
I'm guessing that the sheller is a carry over from a Minneapolis Moline 1200.
could be I don't know for sure bud
They make combines now that actually do the work for you...
Really? How do you get to keep the cobs for heat then ?
hi, are you harvesting corn like this because it is moist and can high moisture corn be harvested and stored this way
we are for the cobs . you could
At what moisture you can put cobs in these structures?
around 25
Merhaba bu şekilde saklanan mısır yağmur dan etkilenmiyor mu?
not vary much at all
Super boulot
thanks
That’s got to be northwest Mn. What county was that in?
centrol
Ok. Second guess would be mahnomen or Becker county.
I would like to see how it works.
coming next week
Why harvest corn with whole cob instead of threshed grain?
To have cobs for bedding and heat
I need this process explained .What is the difference over a combine?
With picked corn you leve it in the crip and let it dry so no cost for drying and then they use the cobs for bedding and they burn them for heat so nothing goes to waste
The corn sheller they are using was actually the last step before combines started being used. The advantage of picking corn and then shelling is the drying cost is eliminated.
@@tjwiersma4406 yes sir
What’s the make on those corn cribs
Soxiux cribs but Danny add the doors
You better tell him to watch he don’t pop a hydraulic line jerk that bucket full he will lose a bunch of corn.
ok
I seen it happen before just don’t wanna see dude lose all that corn.
You have a cool channel to bro
Why do you keep corn with shell in this especial bin?
for drying
Is this seed corn for planting next year?
nope for feed and the cobs are for bedding and heating
💪💖🤝
thanks
Классная установка, просушили в кочанах, а потом в зерно переработали
yes sir
Where were all these cobs when there was a toilet paper shortage.
selling them
супер. лайк та підписка
k
Класс !
thanks
рай для мышей
k
Where is this located at?
Minnesota
@@Bigdaddy1992. what part? I'm in wi
@@bryanginder5903 central Minnesota
@@Bigdaddy1992. that's not to farm from me. I'm 80 miles east of TC
Would it be easier just to combine the corn
If he combines it all then he wont have the cobs to heat the house and shop
@@Bigdaddy1992. plus no drying cost
@@johnlee6054 yes sir
Why don't you just combine it?
do both need cobs for bedding and to heat the shop and house
looks like a big mess why not shell in the first place
its not that bad .they need the cobs for bedding also for heat
Why are you picking corn, just for the sake of it?
Yeah we thought it be fun! No we use the cobs for heat and bedding
Now do you sell your old fashion toilet products on Amazon??😂😂
Ebay
Video of picking corn
th-cam.com/video/VV6QISkK50M/w-d-xo.html
shelling corn this year. th-cam.com/video/nI_Zgj5Nwd8/w-d-xo.html
Dangerous.
ok