Where is this at? That is the most incredible brilliant set up I've ever seen! If we had this years ago farmers here would still be picking corn.I love the old small equipment we use but the concepts that are used here are fantastic!!
This corn is for next year's seed corn. Air drying greatly improves the germination of the seed, while drying shelled wet corn with propane could damage the seeds coating.
Wow, what a clever system, including the homeade power shovel near the start! My French is only fairly good. What's the translation of "bourgoin"? I got most of the rest :-)
Full of respect, but the peeling technology is exactly the same as the Chinese product. China started mass application about 15 years ago. Or is the French technology earlier? If you are interested, you can check out our videos.
Are you talking about the rollers and fingers that husk the corn? That goes back to, probably, at least the 1950's. It's actually neat to see it used in large scale modern applications.
Where is this at? That is the most incredible brilliant set up I've ever seen! If we had this years ago farmers here would still be picking corn.I love the old small equipment we use but the concepts that are used here are fantastic!!
This corn is for next year's seed corn. Air drying greatly improves the germination of the seed, while drying shelled wet corn with propane could damage the seeds coating.
Impressive to see modern ear corn harvest.
I wondered how the French made their toilet paper.
Muy buen sistema y bien eficiente
Wow, what a clever system, including the homeade power shovel near the start! My French is only fairly good. What's the translation of "bourgoin"? I got most of the rest :-)
très propre comme système!Surtout que vous y avez surement passé du temps à bricoler!
Full of respect, but the peeling technology is exactly the same as the Chinese product. China started mass application about 15 years ago. Or is the French technology earlier? If you are interested, you can check out our videos.
Are you talking about the rollers and fingers that husk the corn? That goes back to, probably, at least the 1950's.
It's actually neat to see it used in large scale modern applications.
This is a modern way of doing things backward.!
hindsight80 That’s right! Evolution just took the industrial revolution 10 giant leaps backwards. WTF
Try reading the 1st comment posted for their reason for doing it this way, Debbie Downer... smh
This is far from efficient and there is no way this is seed corn. This is backwards. It works but very inefficient
that is one big corn crib
👍👋👋🍻🥇🖐️🇷🇸
That is really moving ear corn!
Willians