
A few months ago, I was mowing the grass at our place
near Dalhart, Texas, with our 1949 “B” and a 7-ft. sickle
mower. It was cool outside, and there was just a bit of
breeze. As I tried not to chop off our little fruit trees, I
listened to the “snickidee-snick” of the mower and the
“dup-dup-dup” of the “B”, and my mind wandered back
to time spent on my father and mothers tractors on their
farm near Aloys, Nebraska.
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“Snickidee-snick; dup-dup-dup.” |
Different voices ring in my mind; one is me yelling as
I ran out of the house with the porch door slamming
behind me and rattling the house windows, “Dad, where
are you?” I would keep yelling this and walking until I
heard him yell back, “I’m in the tool shed” or, “ In the
machine shed” or, “In the barn” or, “Down in the trees.”
I would go and help him if I could, and watch and play
if I couldn’t.
If it was time to cut hay, Dad would be down in the
trees hook’n up the sickle mowers. One was an IH
mower on an H Farmall, and the other was a Massey-
Harris that was on a JD “50”. Later on, when we got an
Allis D17 with a mower on it, the Massy was retired.
Hooking up mowers was easy when Dad was there, but a
real chore by yourself. You had to get it just right so the
clamps or bolts lined up and, if
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your young arms were a little too short, you couldn’t ease the clutch forward on
the “50” to back up, and still crane your neck around to
see the mower you’re trying to hook up to. The Massy
had a heavy spring contraption that secured one side of
the mower, and a ball-type hitch on the other. He made
modifications to the back of the “50” in order to attach
the Massy mower.
Once the mowers were hooked up, you drove out of the
trees and up to the spindly legged fuel tanks located under
the single row of trees on the south side of the farm.
While the gas gravity-fed into the tractor, you would go
around and let the mower bar down, and then back
around to shut off the gas before it ran over. The grease
gun was in a steel holster bolted to the tractor frame next
to the engine. You grabbed the gun and greased every fitting
on the mower while you were in the shade by the fuel
tanks. Interesting thing about grease guns strapped to a
hot tractor in the summer; the grease gets really runny. I
remember my brother, Tom, stopped to grease out in the
field in the middle of the day, and I was coming up with
the other mower to stop and grease also. As I came within
range, he started shooting hot grease at me with his
grease gun.When it was hot, it would shoot ten or fifteen
yards out of the end of that gun, if you knew how to slam
the handle just right. Makes a terrible mess on the tractor.
We didn’t do that when Dad was around; or maybe, come
to think of it, it was Dad who showed us how to shoot
hot grease. Anyway, the mowers were always well greased
and ready to go.
Mowing in alfalfa on the first cutting of the year was
the easiest because there were no haystacks to mow
around. At that time, Dad put up alfalfa hay in loose
stacks in the field using a stacking frame and a Jayhawk.
The process was time consuming, but at least it was not
the slave labor of small square baling that my brothers
did for our neighbors, and that I did on a dairy farm in
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Grandson Caleb now drives the “50” by himself. |
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