Dairy farm I worked on ran a 45 open station combine like that up until the early 80's. You jump off of that after a full day and half the night and you were covered in an inch of grain dust. Miss those times when the equipment was so much simpler.
Watching this brings back a lot of memories. Spent many a Fall day, and many nights as well - when it stayed warm enough that the dew didn't form and we could keep going all night long - throughout the 60's into the late 70's on a 1959 round back, open station JD95, while my brothers (and for a number of years, my mother) ran the International Harvester 181, and an Allis-Chalmers SP-100. Even though it was pure torture on these open station machines when the wind wasn't cooperating and the chaff & straw were so thick you couldn't breathe without a bandana tied over your face...I miss those days dearly; maybe because it felt so good when you could finally quit for a few hours, and take a shower & get a couple hours of sleep before it was time to get the machines greased-up, fueled-up, and ready to hit it hard again. The old open station machines we had were eventually replaced by a New Holland 980 and a couple JD7700's with cabs...then by a few JD8820's...and over the past 40 years - the newest, biggest machines John Deere had to offer. It's hard to explain to youngsters today what farming was like 50+ years ago, before air conditioned & heated cabs, navigation systems, self-leveling platforms, grease banks (a lot of folks don't know what it's like to find all 50 to 80 zerk fittings on some of these old vintage combines)...even running a machine with reliable BRAKES!...just like it was hard for my Father and uncles to explain to my generation what it was like pitching shocks into a threshing machine pulled to the field by horses and run off a long belt from a Steam Tractor or stationary steam engine 60 or 70 feet away.
Wow! Thanks for taking the time to write this Andrew! Very true, the next generation can never fully appreciate the hardships past generations have endured.
I really enjoy your videos. My Dad worked at a John Deere dealership when I was a kid and I think those green and yellow decals are great too! We rotated wheat and corn and Daddy would let me ride on the combine with him. 45 I think. Daddy passed Thanksgiving 2021, but your videos help me relive good times. Thanks
I have to say it: having a pressurized cab makes the job a whole lot better, especially if the acres are 3+ digits. But it's great seeing the old stuff run!
I was just out at Renners farm show in Illinois and they claim to have the oldest self propelled combine in existence. It was also a 40. It was all restored. At least we know yours is still working. Sure enjoy your videos keep them coming.
I'd be as happy as a dog with two , er , tails Lovely piece of kit and only needed a little bit of encouragement. That grain will grind up nicely . Good job 👍🇬🇧
Thanks Stephen, always smashing to have a Bloke from across the pond drop a line. l guess that sounded kinda counterfeit, didn't didn't it?Great to hear from you!
Damn do I love old machines. I farm with a 7120 case and a 1660 Case but I absolutely love this old stuff, i want to get an old massey harris 90 special in running condition like my dad used to run back in the 60’s. love the video and old stuff so much. Cant run old stuff so much on our acres but would love to have one as a toy for 30 ac or so every year
All the time I hear people complain about the money not being enough for how "hard their job is"😅. All of them have never worked a farm. Good memories you bring me! Thank you. My daddy passed away when I was 8 years old but I remember him getting m all dressed up and going to a "rat killing ". A bunch of old men standing around a corn planter drinking and watching a couple of terriers catch mice. Great memories
😂 those credits or just hilarious! Remember to watch to the end, to see the videographer and the wardrobe provider!😂😂 I just cracked up when I saw that!
That combine is an absolute beauty! Love all your JD equipment! We also have quite a few pieces of green 😀 also. Case and IH snd a smorgasbord round out the rest. My combine is a 6600 JD. Machine runs great and I do my high moisture corn with it. I don't have my trucks finish 😕 😒 yet so I don't do our beans or dry corn as it gets hauled to whatever elevator can take it. Today we finished chopping the bean stalks for bedding and it is unbelievable the amount of beans that are left in the chaff. This machine is damn near brand new and it leaves this many beans go out the back?? Needless to say I am going to make damn sure my trucks are running for this upcoming season. Can't make money when your crop gets spit out on the ground!! Large in no way always means better. I'd take your little popcorn picker over that new machine 😉 any day!😊
Hey Joe! Thanks for watching, and for taking time to write about what's going on with your harvest time. l agree, bigger and more complicated don't always mean better!🤠
Howdy Bill, I’m guessing it’s plugged from a tiny piece of bark from last season’s dipstick! I’m thinking that gas has passed her expiration date😬 It was mighty murky and I’m pretty sure I could smell the varnish from here! She does pick ‘em off nicely when she’s running though! Bless’ns to ya, Tedd
Back in late 1990's kids and I ran a jd 7700, 4400 self propelled and a international 915 pull type with belt pickups attached harvesting windrowed kentucky bluegrass for seed at a combined speed of 2.7 mph. Harvesting 24lbs per bushel bluegrass seed was a "go slow" to give time for the cleaning part of the combine to separate the fine light seed from the straw and chaff.
We ran one of those for a few years. I always wanted to burn it to the ground. Find a chunk that would stop it up. Drop that header was a nightmare anytime. But it would catch the cleanest grand sample of any combine.
Boy do I remember the humidity there. Lived on the eastern shore working on my uncles farm till I was 28. Now I have lived in Central Wisconsin for 19 years farming out here the people say its hot and humid here i say this ain't nothing lol.
Sure will. Going for a high of 77 low humidity today. I have family in this weekend. They say it’s almost cold here! Gotta walk my middle daughter down the isle this afternoon! Stay cool there and don’t work to hard! Keep up with them videos. I love the old equipment.
Usually it's humid everywhere east of Lincoln Nebraska. I have cousins near Omaha. My good friend lived in Wyoming an hour north of Cheyenne and after about an hour the sweat soaked saddle pads would be dry. Here in Michigan it's humid most of the time. Winter time when the high temperature is 20 and colder it can be quite dry air.
Excellent video Bill :) I remember those John Deere 40 self propelled gas motor ones my one old late neighbor farmer across road from home farm I grew up had he did my late dad also his brother home farm plus 2 other rents farms to for beef cows ! In 1986 my late Dad, his older brother bought at International Dealership a 2 owner used 1968 McCormick International 105C combine gas motor plus had cab plus with fan on it with filter for Air Conditioning 3 speed motor! But want keep motor also fuel in that combine use 89 octane gas with 5 % Ethonal or 90 or higher octane gas with no Ethonal plus grey bottle Of STP Total Treatment fuel injection and carb cleaner in fuel tank on top tank up 3/4 full and 1 gallon in tank with Desiel fuel ! Plus run 10w30 engine oil Conventional type no synthetic!
Great Video sir. From the north west end md. here. Liked and subscribed!! Ya earned it. Very entertaining and yea, you got it, hatefully humid round here mostly. Ha.
Hey Bill,,,ive got this in my saved videos cache. Was watching a couple older videos where you were so happy to hit 1000 subscribers. Just curious,,gow do you feel now that your at 2.5k? You have the most genuine content out there.
Yeah Ron, l'm happy that things are heading in the right direction much faster than they were last year. Just trying to put up some good videos to keep the momentum up.Thanks.
When you were checking your machine that reminded me when I was on a harvest crew. I was doing my servicing and got sidetracked and left the door on the return elevator open and eventually began cutting. I don't recall who noticed it, but the boss was not too happy with me.
Hey George! Thanks for the kind words. Snoopy is doing fine except we have a difficult time keeping him home, too many "girlfriends" around the neighborhood.
In Farm Simulator 22 I actually own an exquisite, mint condition, JD 40! I even have the original, factory optional umbrella, toolbox, and radio installed! Lol 😂😂! I also have the red Lanz version that I think they sold in Europe back in the day.
My lord, I can't believe that beast fired up again after seeing that gas! There's no way a new modern computer controlled engine would ever even attempt to run on that old brown gas, lol😂! If you can even still call it gas! They sure don't build stuff as tough, simple, and reliable as they used too!
I suspect that mice, rats, and crud would not be nearly as much problem if the combine was cleaned out after harvest each year rather than before harvest the next year.
Avant d'utiliser une moissonneuse, on nettoie les circuits, on change les filtres, on graisse les axes, on vérifie la tension des courroies, on vidange le moteur.
Dirt Farmer Flapjacks 4 cups home ground wheat flour 2 t salt 1/4 cup sugar 1T plus 1t Baking powder 2 farm fresh eggs 3 T melted homemade butter 2 cup milk (fresh from our milk cow) Whisk all ingredients together until just blended; some lumps are okay. Heat a frying pan or griddle, If you aren’t using a nonstick pan, melt a bit of butter in your frying pan or griddle first, and then pour small amounts of batter (about a 1/4-cup) into pan. Cook the pancake until it begins to bubble and then flip and cook the other side. Fry until browned on both sides. You can also use this batter in a waffle iron; follow the directions of your individual model. For daily-free pancakes, use a milk replacement such as coconut or almond milk and replace the butter with coconut butter. Flapjack Add-in Ideas: 1 cup Black raspberries ¼ cup mini chocolate chips 1 diced apple 1 diced banana ½ cup blueberries ¼ cup peanut butter 2 tablespoons lemon juice and 2 teaspoons poppy seeds ½ cup crumbled bacon ½ cup coconut milk (instead of regular milk) and ¼ cup shredded coconut 1 mashed banana and ½ cup diced strawberries ½ cup pureed pumpkin and 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice ¼ cup shredded zucchini ½ cup shredded cheddar cheese ½ cup diced peaches ½ cup yogurt (instead of milk)
In the fall of 1959 the engine on dad's baldwin pull type combine blew. Spring of 60 he bought a 1959 lay over combine. It was a model 45 John Deere self propelled combine. We used that machine for yrs. In 1969 dad bought a 1959 model 95. For a few yrs dad run the 95 , I run the 45. Here in south central kansas the little Arkansas River flows thur one of are farms. A big rain up stream. We moved the combines to that farm. Harvested a field of wheat 30 ft from a very high little Arkansas River. We got done. The river did not flood. Later dad traded for a 1969 95 combine. On that combine dad put an electric fuel pump on it to push the gas up to the engine. What state are you in?
Hey James, great to get a note from Northern Ireland! Dirt Farmer is a slang term over here for a poor, small farmer that uses old, out dated equipment. Thanks for watching and commenting!
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 So interesting to see it's still working, I recognized it right away, I painted the boards around the bin and reel boards , the lights were the give away, we installed them and restructured the radiator screen.
I'm in Bucks county Pa. , Dad traded that JD 40 in at Gunther Huesman dealership where the JD 3300 came from, always wondered where the 40 went, so now I know.Good job on your videos and sharing history of your farm !
Better then using horses but what a piece of junk compared to today. Most of the crop went out the back end! So slow especially if you have several hundred acres! Pure misery!
Not all of us can afford half a million dollar combines, just for a small acreage. The one man combine harvester was definitely easier than binding and threshing, not sure about better, just easier.
Hey Mark, just saw this, I am most certainly not "well to do", I make below poverty level income, we don't have air conditioning, and can't aford health insurance. What you see is my real life with a little humour thrown in. God has blessed us in many ways, making lotsa money is not one of them. But He's always provided for us in miraculous ways, and made sure we have no money worries. Hope you keep watchin'!
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 sorry. I wasn't sure what to say without offending your farming situation, it seems like you make the best of what you have. I know God answers prayers and takes our needs into consideration. God bless you and your family farm.
Snoopy seems to be a special family farm dog ,amazes me all of your dogs avoid getting in the machinery. Love my 🐕
Enjoyed that y’all, grew up with a JD 55 and 95, then we took a big leap to a JD 6600…thx for the memory jolt😂😂😂God Bless y’all🇺🇸
Thanks Husker!
Nice to see an old 40 first combine I ever ran seat right where the dust could come up and settle on you
I believe if someone sat down with ya on a porch you would some good story's to tell ..👍👍👍
Dairy farm I worked on ran a 45 open station combine like that up until the early 80's. You jump off of that after a full day and half the night and you were covered in an inch of grain dust. Miss those times when the equipment was so much simpler.
A good
Great to see the 40 in action. Love those decals.
My dad had a Case model 150 and a Case model 120. The 150 was a great machine. Used it until 1984.
My grandaddy's first self-propelled combine was a new 40 john Deere
Thanks for taking the time to bring us along
Watching this brings back a lot of memories. Spent many a Fall day, and many nights as well - when it stayed warm enough that the dew didn't form and we could keep going all night long - throughout the 60's into the late 70's on a 1959 round back, open station JD95, while my brothers (and for a number of years, my mother) ran the International Harvester 181, and an Allis-Chalmers SP-100. Even though it was pure torture on these open station machines when the wind wasn't cooperating and the chaff & straw were so thick you couldn't breathe without a bandana tied over your face...I miss those days dearly; maybe because it felt so good when you could finally quit for a few hours, and take a shower & get a couple hours of sleep before it was time to get the machines greased-up, fueled-up, and ready to hit it hard again. The old open station machines we had were eventually replaced by a New Holland 980 and a couple JD7700's with cabs...then by a few JD8820's...and over the past 40 years - the newest, biggest machines John Deere had to offer. It's hard to explain to youngsters today what farming was like 50+ years ago, before air conditioned & heated cabs, navigation systems, self-leveling platforms, grease banks (a lot of folks don't know what it's like to find all 50 to 80 zerk fittings on some of these old vintage combines)...even running a machine with reliable BRAKES!...just like it was hard for my Father and uncles to explain to my generation what it was like pitching shocks into a threshing machine pulled to the field by horses and run off a long belt from a Steam Tractor or stationary steam engine 60 or 70 feet away.
Wow! Thanks for taking the time to write this Andrew! Very true, the next generation can never fully appreciate the hardships past generations have endured.
I really enjoy your videos. My Dad worked at a John Deere dealership when I was a kid and I think those green and yellow decals are great too! We rotated wheat and corn and Daddy would let me ride on the combine with him. 45 I think. Daddy passed Thanksgiving 2021, but your videos help me relive good times. Thanks
Hey Ricky! l'm glad my videos bring back good memories for you, thanks for letting me know.
I will keep watching and remembering my Dad. Tractor Church is just too cool!🙏
👍@@rickyauman7565
I have to say it: having a pressurized cab makes the job a whole lot better, especially if the acres are 3+ digits. But it's great seeing the old stuff run!
I had a model 42 combine. The pull type version of the model 40. Sweet little machine.
Love the views of Texas always. Have never seen a 40 only 95s south east Texas rice fields
I was just out at Renners farm show in Illinois and they claim to have the oldest self propelled combine in existence. It was also a 40. It was all restored. At least we know yours is still working. Sure enjoy your videos keep them coming.
Great video, love the farmin, back in the days dad and I farmed and harvested with orange, but we had green tractor too
Thanks Steve, good to hear from you!
Would that be in the same family as a black Berry????I feel there related...great video 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Hey Josh! More like a raspberry.
I'd be as happy as a dog with two , er , tails
Lovely piece of kit and only needed a little bit of encouragement. That grain will grind up nicely . Good job 👍🇬🇧
Thanks Stephen, always smashing to have a Bloke from across the pond drop a line. l guess that sounded kinda counterfeit, didn't didn't it?Great to hear from you!
I had a 45 . Your machine is still getting it done.
Damn do I love old machines. I farm with a 7120 case and a 1660
Case but I absolutely love this old stuff, i want to get an old massey harris 90 special in running condition like my dad used to run back in the 60’s. love the video and old stuff so much. Cant run old stuff so much on our acres but would love to have one as a toy for 30 ac or so every year
Thanks for sharing from So. MD....
We’ll be running our round back 40 this week! Great video again!
Great, thanks! Will y'all post a video of the 40?
All the time I hear people complain about the money not being enough for how "hard their job is"😅. All of them have never worked a farm. Good memories you bring me! Thank you. My daddy passed away when I was 8 years old but I remember him getting m all dressed up and going to a "rat killing ". A bunch of old men standing around a corn planter drinking and watching a couple of terriers catch mice. Great memories
😄👍
Just a great video. I had a really nice 45 round back for a while. Got to cut wheat with it one year. Good times. The credits were top shelf 😅!
Thanks for the kind words, glad you enjoyed it.
Good video remind me my day back in the combine
Love seeing old iron working
😂 those credits or just hilarious! Remember to watch to the end, to see the videographer and the wardrobe provider!😂😂 I just cracked up when I saw that!
I really enjoy your videos I love the old machinery special John Deere I'm near your channel and I really enjoyed thanks from Gary
That combine is an absolute beauty! Love all your JD equipment! We also have quite a few pieces of green 😀 also. Case and IH snd a smorgasbord round out the rest. My combine is a 6600 JD. Machine runs great and I do my high moisture corn with it. I don't have my trucks finish 😕 😒 yet so I don't do our beans or dry corn as it gets hauled to whatever elevator can take it. Today we finished chopping the bean stalks for bedding and it is unbelievable the amount of beans that are left in the chaff. This machine is damn near brand new and it leaves this many beans go out the back?? Needless to say I am going to make damn sure my trucks are running for this upcoming season. Can't make money when your crop gets spit out on the ground!! Large in no way always means better. I'd take your little popcorn picker over that new machine 😉 any day!😊
Hey Joe! Thanks for watching, and for taking time to write about what's going on with your harvest time. l agree, bigger and more complicated don't always mean better!🤠
You are fun to hang out with. You always seem to be having a good time with it.
Thanks Ron!
Our first self-propelled combine when I was a kid was a 40 roundback just like this. Thought we really had something, LOL!!!
Beats my Grandpa’s little JD pull behind
Howdy Bill, I’m guessing it’s plugged from a tiny piece of bark from last season’s dipstick! I’m thinking that gas has passed her expiration date😬 It was mighty murky and I’m pretty sure I could smell the varnish from here! She does pick ‘em off nicely when she’s running though!
Bless’ns to ya, Tedd
As always Ted, your kind words and observations are on the mark, encouraging, humorous, and appreciated!
Nothing runs like a Deere.
Might be time to drain and clean the old tank . Refill with ethanol free gas and stable.
Great videos you put out.
Just ran into you channel today
Welcome Burt, good to hear from you!
Gonna be some good eatin Farmer!!
Beautiful farm and landscape. Wish were that green here in south Texas.
Rains coming soon don't worry, it ain't too bad here in my area
@@johndowe7003 Just south of San Antonio we've had no more than 10 inches of rain since the fall of 2021.
we had a 40 square back very good machine
It's a mighty lucky man who gets to live that close to heaven.
Best regards from Indiana.
That is a very nice old combine !!. When i was growing up we had a massy super 92 good combine. No cab it was a hot dirty sombeotch.
Yeah, you're almost tempted to take a shower at the end of the day, even if it isn't Saturday night!
Back in late 1990's kids and I ran a jd 7700, 4400 self propelled and a international 915 pull type with belt pickups attached harvesting windrowed kentucky bluegrass for seed at a combined speed of 2.7 mph. Harvesting 24lbs per bushel bluegrass seed was a "go slow" to give time for the cleaning part of the combine to separate the fine light seed from the straw and chaff.
Cool, thanks for taking the time to comment, interesting stuff.
Remind me of a farming Phil off duck dynasty. 😂 cool combine
We ran one of those for a few years. I always wanted to burn it to the ground. Find a chunk that would stop it up. Drop that header was a nightmare anytime. But it would catch the cleanest grand sample of any combine.
Boy do I remember the humidity there. Lived on the eastern shore working on my uncles farm till I was 28. Now I have lived in Central Wisconsin for 19 years farming out here the people say its hot and humid here i say this ain't nothing lol.
Thanks for watching and leaving a great comment. Enjoy the rest of your more comfortable summer!
Sure will. Going for a high of 77 low humidity today. I have family in this weekend. They say it’s almost cold here! Gotta walk my middle daughter down the isle this afternoon! Stay cool there and don’t work to hard! Keep up with them videos. I love the old equipment.
@@jefferytrice9180 We're heading for 89 today, 88 percent humidity right now. May God bless the marriage.
I like old combines. They are far more simple to run and maintain
I agree!
Usually it's humid everywhere east of Lincoln Nebraska. I have cousins near Omaha. My good friend lived in Wyoming an hour north of Cheyenne and after about an hour the sweat soaked saddle pads would be dry. Here in Michigan it's humid most of the time. Winter time when the high temperature is 20 and colder it can be quite dry air.
@danw6014 Howdy neighbor, Greet’ns from The South of Michigan! Barry County is my epicenter.
@@sawsurgeon Jackson county for me.
Our first combine was a 25 later on brother got 55 after that 4400 then ended up with two 7700 at the end of his farming
Excellent video Bill :) I remember those John Deere 40 self propelled gas motor ones my one old late neighbor farmer across road from home farm I grew up had he did my late dad also his brother home farm plus 2 other rents farms to for beef cows ! In 1986 my late Dad, his older brother bought at International Dealership a 2 owner used 1968 McCormick International 105C combine gas motor plus had cab plus with fan on it with filter for Air Conditioning 3 speed motor! But want keep motor also fuel in that combine use 89 octane gas with 5 % Ethonal or 90 or higher octane gas with no Ethonal plus grey bottle Of STP Total Treatment fuel injection and carb cleaner in fuel tank on top tank up 3/4 full and 1 gallon in tank with Desiel fuel ! Plus run 10w30 engine oil Conventional type no synthetic!
Hey Andrew! Thanks for the kind words and the interesting details in your comment.
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 welcome and hopefully helps you out too on stuff try too!
super cool😎
Great Video sir. From the north west end md. here. Liked and subscribed!! Ya earned it. Very entertaining and yea, you got it, hatefully humid round here mostly. Ha.
Hey Critter! thanks much for liking and subscribing, and for the kind words.
Belin!!! quanto ciartame
We used to use a pull type Alis Chalmers 60. That John Deere of yours is up town. Thanks.
Well dOne
Thanks Charles.
Ok, I noticed a mistake in the credits. Flatt & Scruggs' Foggy Mountain Breakdown should have been put in! Lol, great job!
Thanks Morgan, glad you enjoyed it. I hope Earl Scruggs will forgive my poor rendition of his legendary song.
Hey Bill,,,ive got this in my saved videos cache. Was watching a couple older videos where you were so happy to hit 1000 subscribers. Just curious,,gow do you feel now that your at 2.5k? You have the most genuine content out there.
Yeah Ron, l'm happy that things are heading in the right direction much faster than they were last year. Just trying to put up some good videos to keep the momentum up.Thanks.
Nice
Hank at Hamilton farms found a 40 jd combine in great shape ina barn that’s falling down
When you were checking your machine that reminded me when I was on a harvest crew. I was doing my servicing and got sidetracked and left the door on the
return elevator open and eventually began cutting. I don't recall who noticed it, but the boss was not too happy with me.
HaHa, yeah l can imagine!
Just found ya Bill . I’m gonna hang around a while . God Bless
Thank you Mark! And welcome, hope you enjoy what you see, please like and comment when you can.
Damn you mean you’re a real farmer u didn’t have to call John Deere come out and fix that that is amazing
HaHa, I know it would have been entertaining to watch those dealer "technicians"try to figure out where to plug in their lap-top.
U should be a comedian but u make a damn good farmer
@@johnalexander8589 I'm having fun doing both!
I've had a number of those John Deere 45 engine's over the years. I believe it's the same motor as a John Deere LA.
I think you mean a JD 2010.
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 your right. I'm thinking of the old 12a combine
Thanks
The engine in a 12a combine was an LUC power unit. Little different from an LA. But not much.
Great video. Nicely done. I was wondering how Snoopy is doing.I really like your opening himself bouncing through the field.
Hey George! Thanks for the kind words. Snoopy is doing fine except we have a difficult time keeping him home, too many "girlfriends" around the neighborhood.
Must be near Hooterville lol
Either that or it's just down the road from Bugtussle.😁
Hello bud I just found your channel very interesting so far have so many question already
Welcome! Keep watching, you might find some answers, but most likely more questions. It's fun ether way!
In Farm Simulator 22 I actually own an exquisite, mint condition, JD 40! I even have the original, factory optional umbrella, toolbox, and radio installed! Lol 😂😂! I also have the red Lanz version that I think they sold in Europe back in the day.
My lord, I can't believe that beast fired up again after seeing that gas! There's no way a new modern computer controlled engine would ever even attempt to run on that old brown gas, lol😂! If you can even still call it gas! They sure don't build stuff as tough, simple, and reliable as they used too!
Man you have the life I dream of ...hate all this technology
Being a backwards country boy does have it's advantages.
We used to have a 95 EB that was converted to CS. It never had brakes that worked. That 40 have working brakes? I have always liked the 40/45s.
Hey Chucky! Yeah, the brakes seem to work fine even on these hills.
I suspect that mice, rats, and crud would not be nearly as much problem if the combine was cleaned out after harvest each year rather than before harvest the next year.
Avant d'utiliser une moissonneuse, on nettoie les circuits, on change les filtres, on graisse les axes, on vérifie la tension des courroies, on vidange le moteur.
Just wondering how many tractors you got sittin around
So why don't you clean it up before you put it away for winter? Would save a lot of time when time to use again. Also keeps mice out
We had JD40 & 10 foot header open and eat a lot of dust
You could add a stand pipe in the tank
😊
Dad had a electric fuel pump he installed and it also preventer vapor locks in carburetor
Smart man.
Got to clean them machines up before you put them in the barn to rest.🤠
Wouldn’t life be easier if you cleaned it out at the end of the season?
dad use to take mom's broom from the kitchen to sweep the bin out of the combine,that always pissed her off lol
I wonder why not get a shop vac and clean it up before you put it up for the winter and store it with a box of mothballs in it.
Great seeing the equipment and a question: what is recipe for your flap jacks?
I'll have the ladies get that to you in a reply to your comment.
Dirt Farmer Flapjacks
4 cups home ground wheat flour
2 t salt
1/4 cup sugar
1T plus 1t Baking powder
2 farm fresh eggs
3 T melted homemade butter
2 cup milk (fresh from our milk cow)
Whisk all ingredients together until just blended; some lumps are okay. Heat a frying pan or griddle, If you aren’t using a nonstick pan, melt a bit of butter in your frying pan or griddle first, and then pour small amounts of batter (about a 1/4-cup) into pan. Cook the pancake until it begins to bubble and then flip and cook the other side. Fry until browned on both sides. You can also use this batter in a waffle iron; follow the directions of your individual model.
For daily-free pancakes, use a milk replacement such as coconut or almond milk and replace the butter with coconut butter.
Flapjack Add-in Ideas:
1 cup Black raspberries
¼ cup mini chocolate chips
1 diced apple
1 diced banana
½ cup blueberries
¼ cup peanut butter
2 tablespoons lemon juice and 2 teaspoons poppy seeds
½ cup crumbled bacon
½ cup coconut milk (instead of regular milk) and ¼ cup
shredded coconut
1 mashed banana and ½ cup diced strawberries
½ cup pureed pumpkin and 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
¼ cup shredded zucchini
½ cup shredded cheddar cheese
½ cup diced peaches
½ cup yogurt (instead of milk)
I NEED ONE
In the fall of 1959 the engine on dad's baldwin pull type combine blew. Spring of 60 he bought a 1959 lay over combine. It was a model 45 John Deere self propelled combine. We used that machine for yrs. In 1969 dad bought a 1959 model 95. For a few yrs dad run the 95 , I run the 45. Here in south central kansas the little Arkansas River flows thur one of are farms. A big rain up stream. We moved the combines to that farm. Harvested a field of wheat 30 ft from a very high little Arkansas River. We got done. The river did not flood. Later dad traded for a 1969 95 combine. On that combine dad put an electric fuel pump on it to push the gas up to the engine. What state are you in?
Hey, thanks for the great story. We are in Maryland.
What country is it?
Johnny crash n goodwill dumpster🤣🤣
What do you do with the wheat?
My Women folk grind it into flour and bake up bread, biscuits, flapjacks, and many other delightful delicacies!
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 Good! My first guess was to use it as feed for livestock.
banjo in the hallow is the song
Is this the 2024 model?
Might consider draining that crap out and store it with a full tank
I know you're right on both comments.
Is that a 3010 5:58
Yes.A gasser.
Why do you refer to being a dirt farmer?where are you ? Regards james lockhart Northern Ireland.
Hey James, great to get a note from Northern Ireland! Dirt Farmer is a slang term over here for a poor, small farmer that uses old, out dated equipment. Thanks for watching and commenting!
We are in Southern Maryland, in the USA on the eastern seaboard.
Thank you i was interested,we must be dirt farmets here for some of our machinery is out dated regards james
Arizona 116° 60% humidity
You win, sounds like a good opportunity to bake cookies on your cars dashboard.
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 least we got rain today. Been 4 months and it was actually snow last precipitation
@@Rubyranch393 I hope it was enough to do some good.
How come there is no dust while your combining? Your Wheat must be wet.
Hey Rick! No, the wheat was plenty dry, I don't know... maybe our high level of humidity helps keep the dust to a minimum.
Where and when did you buy that John Deere 40 combine? That was my dad's exact machine he traded in on a 3300 in '83.
Up in Pennsylvania about 10 or 12 years ago, from a small farmer. The dealer sticker was from New Jersey.
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 So interesting to see it's still working, I recognized it right away, I painted the boards around the bin and reel boards , the lights were the give away, we installed them and restructured the radiator screen.
@@garygarges5665 Amazing!!! It's a great machine, we got the 2 row corn head too, never used it. Are you in Jersey?
I'm in Bucks county Pa. , Dad traded that JD 40 in at Gunther Huesman dealership where the JD 3300 came from, always wondered where the 40 went, so now I know.Good job on your videos and sharing history of your farm !
What year is the combine
Hey,l think '59
Looks like a 1/2 ton an acre crop 😂😂😂
Yep, the shower will run "black" for sure after that
Better then using horses but what a piece of junk compared to today. Most of the crop went out the back end! So slow especially if you have several hundred acres! Pure misery!
Not all of us can afford half a million dollar combines, just for a small acreage. The one man combine harvester was definitely easier than binding and threshing, not sure about better, just easier.
Beats hell out of a horse-pulled reaper, or a scythe/cradle set up, though. Ya gotta admit.
Get out of the 1800’s buddy!
Can't aford it!😁
You're not a serious farmer are you ? Most of the things you do are comedic. Your probably well too do and this is a hobby farm.
Hey Mark, just saw this, I am most certainly not "well to do", I make below poverty level income, we don't have air conditioning, and can't aford health insurance. What you see is my real life with a little humour thrown in. God has blessed us in many ways, making lotsa money is not one of them. But He's always provided for us in miraculous ways, and made sure we have no money worries. Hope you keep watchin'!
@@so.md.dirtfarmer2226 sorry. I wasn't sure what to say without offending your farming situation, it seems like you make the best of what you have. I know God answers prayers and takes our needs into consideration. God bless you and your family farm.