1950 model here. 8 years in a one room school. First 3 years rode my pony. First tractor Massey 44 Special with a Farmhand Hi Lift loader. First drove a '51 International L120. No synchro. If you didn't double clutch you didn't shift. I feel it has been a charmed era that my generation has lived through. Lots of opportunities and no wars, invasions, persecutions, expulsions, etc. for the last 75 years. I feel that is a luxury that hasn't been experienced by many though history. So if there are some bumps in the road going ahead they can't be any worse than what many of our ancestors experienced. It is really great to see how the posters on Agriville represent the full range of ages involved in agriculture. I think there is lots we can learn from each other.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostWay to go. We were all enjoying a really good friend, nothing political, nothing contentious. Then you went and brought up climate change.
Now alarm will go off in chucks basement, And he will spring into action Posting a red and pink map disprooving Your earliest spring ever claim , and the entire thread will degenerate from there.
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Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View PostWay to go. We were all enjoying a really good thread, nothing political, nothing contentious. Then you went and brought up climate change.
Now alarms will go off in chucks basement, And he will spring into action Posting a red and pink map disproving Your earliest spring ever claim , and the entire thread will degenerate from there.
?????
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Originally posted by blackpowder View PostHow many would go back?
Going out to the barn on a cold night to milk it just felt so good when you entered ,and a team to haul the manure out,we used a moose hide so when you got out to field you hooked onto other end and rolled it that way you didnt have to fork it off.
Lots of fond memories, what will the now gen have to rember ? going out to heated shop to warm tractor or pickup with heated seats,steering wheel,power everything, nice but not much for memories.
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Pumping water from the old red steel hand pump in the kitchen out of the cistern
Carrying 5 gal pails up the crick bank to water pigs in winter , not much bigger than pails
Trapping ,skinning and stretching huge piles of beaver, muskrat , coyotes and the odd mink
Marvelling at the big check from dominion Soudak in the spring , and buying my first motorbike with proceeds
Too many kids have never had that opportunity and sense of acclomplishment . Still remember how happy I was at about 9 or 10 when I could set the springs on a large beaver connibear by myself
Getting my first wood burning kit for Xmas ,at about 6, what could possibly go wrong?
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Originally posted by caseih View PostPumping water from the old red steel hand pump in the kitchen out of the cistern
Carrying 5 gal pails up the crick bank to water pigs in winter , not much bigger than pails
Trapping ,skinning and stretching huge piles of beaver, muskrat , coyotes and the odd mink
Marvelling at the big check from dominion Soudak in the spring , and buying my first motorbike with proceeds
Too many kids have never had that opportunity and sense of acclomplishment . Still remember how happy I was at about 9 or 10 when I could set the springs on a large beaver connibear by myself
Getting my first wood burning kit for Xmas ,at about 6, what could possibly go wrong?
We only had 6 stretchers and we left them on for a week, so every Wednesday night we would skin 6 more. We would freeze them outside if the bounty started to pile up. In the spring we packaged up our furs and mailed them to sell through SIR. It was the year that muskrat prices fell like a rock. What had been $5 or 6 dollars the year before became $1 or 2. Our entire harvest proceeds only paid for the traps and stretchers that we had bought at the start of the season.
Kinda like farming some years.
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Originally posted by LQQKY View PostSeems we're older than we thought we were.
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Originally posted by fjlip View PostMost are highly EXPERIENCED, brimming with knowledge and an appreciation for the positive changes in our once simpler lives. We could/should write a book. I have videoed many hours of our parents on both sides just talking about life from the 30's and on. Saved for grandchildren.
Good thinking on making those recordings.
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With all the posts reminiscing of the past, we all forgot to mention the pleasure the outhouse provided us.
Was great on those minus 30 degree days!Last edited by foragefarmer; Dec 1, 2020, 19:25.
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