I spent a week in Minnesota visiting my number two son and his lovely family. While there, we made a short trip to Jordan, MN to attend the 49th Annual Scott Carver Thresher Association's Harvest Festival. For a bunch of urban dwellers, this was an eye opening outing.
First and foremost, the Scott Carver Thresher Association are focused on preserving the history of their farming heritage. Think "antique car show" and then imagine tractors in place of autos. Really. Rows and rows of antique but running tractors in all stages of restoration and daily usage.
There were tractors dragging trailers full of benches to ferry people from the car park to the display area of the grounds. They even had a parade of tractors. We saw corn being popped off the cobs, then ground into meal. We saw wheat being threshed. It was a big operation and very well run. Vendors sold their wares, lots of fair food available and live music and dancing all day long.
I was quite taken with the juxtaposition of new versus old. There was someone riding around this show on a Segway. I walked from a building filled with steam powered antique farm equipment down a short walk to a snack bar and saw it standing parked beside the building. It made me smile.
Fields filled with 1940's tractors still in working condition... all having been driven to their spots on the line... and still, folks drove around in golf carts labeled "I wanna be an Oliver!"
We wandered around looking at steam equipment, farm implements that run off the tractor engines, and stuff that's pulled behind to harvest all kinds of crops. They even had a working sawmill set up to show how farmers made their own boards from felled trees using their farm engines to power the milling equipment.
This whole operation was celebrating the working farm and its historical roots. Great fun!
One of the obvious crowd favorites was the "Priceless 88" a pink Oliver tractor with custom painted lettering proclaiming that she was "pulling for Papa".
While we were admiring this tractor fit for a princess, the owner came up and offered to let us take a picture of our princess aboard. She even dried the seat off before we set my granddaughter on the seat.
She wanted to drive it, and I got the feeling that she wasn't much younger than the farm kids were when they learned how to drive these things.
Since this festival is a harvest festival, one of the operations that went full time was wheat threshing. We watched for a while. I had no idea what was happening, so I asked an older gentleman who was also in the crowd. He explained the operation and then laughed at us city dwellers. That long belt is connected to the tractor motor. Two guys use pitchforks to shovel wheat onto the conveyor belt. The threshing machine whacks the heads off the wheat stalks, then winnows and filters the wheat berries/seeds into that red hopper while the chaff is shot out into a pile that you can just see at the right of the hopper. It was really an elegantly simple process. I guess that is what works long term in farming. Simple. Elegant.
I really recommend this festival (the first weekend in August is glorious in Minnesota) for anyone. It was a fun family outing filled with interesting gadgetry, antique equipment and lots of educational opportunities.
-- Sandee Wagner
For Marilyn, the biggest Tractor I've Ever Seen!
Just for a reference point, my son is six foot two inches tall and my grandkids are GORGEOUS!!
First and foremost, the Scott Carver Thresher Association are focused on preserving the history of their farming heritage. Think "antique car show" and then imagine tractors in place of autos. Really. Rows and rows of antique but running tractors in all stages of restoration and daily usage.
There were tractors dragging trailers full of benches to ferry people from the car park to the display area of the grounds. They even had a parade of tractors. We saw corn being popped off the cobs, then ground into meal. We saw wheat being threshed. It was a big operation and very well run. Vendors sold their wares, lots of fair food available and live music and dancing all day long.
I was quite taken with the juxtaposition of new versus old. There was someone riding around this show on a Segway. I walked from a building filled with steam powered antique farm equipment down a short walk to a snack bar and saw it standing parked beside the building. It made me smile.
Fields filled with 1940's tractors still in working condition... all having been driven to their spots on the line... and still, folks drove around in golf carts labeled "I wanna be an Oliver!"
We wandered around looking at steam equipment, farm implements that run off the tractor engines, and stuff that's pulled behind to harvest all kinds of crops. They even had a working sawmill set up to show how farmers made their own boards from felled trees using their farm engines to power the milling equipment.
This whole operation was celebrating the working farm and its historical roots. Great fun!
One of the obvious crowd favorites was the "Priceless 88" a pink Oliver tractor with custom painted lettering proclaiming that she was "pulling for Papa".
While we were admiring this tractor fit for a princess, the owner came up and offered to let us take a picture of our princess aboard. She even dried the seat off before we set my granddaughter on the seat.
She wanted to drive it, and I got the feeling that she wasn't much younger than the farm kids were when they learned how to drive these things.
Since this festival is a harvest festival, one of the operations that went full time was wheat threshing. We watched for a while. I had no idea what was happening, so I asked an older gentleman who was also in the crowd. He explained the operation and then laughed at us city dwellers. That long belt is connected to the tractor motor. Two guys use pitchforks to shovel wheat onto the conveyor belt. The threshing machine whacks the heads off the wheat stalks, then winnows and filters the wheat berries/seeds into that red hopper while the chaff is shot out into a pile that you can just see at the right of the hopper. It was really an elegantly simple process. I guess that is what works long term in farming. Simple. Elegant.
I really recommend this festival (the first weekend in August is glorious in Minnesota) for anyone. It was a fun family outing filled with interesting gadgetry, antique equipment and lots of educational opportunities.
-- Sandee Wagner
For Marilyn, the biggest Tractor I've Ever Seen!
Just for a reference point, my son is six foot two inches tall and my grandkids are GORGEOUS!!
7 comments:
Sounds like a lot of fun. My grandkiddo would love a day spent with tractors. His grandma would be wanting to drive the biggest one there.
Oh Marilyn, I didn't even post a picture of the biggest one there. Let's see if I can add it to the bottom of the story for you.
Wow! Get me a ladder and give me instructions. I'm going for a drive!
Pretty cool!
It was a lot of fun! And it totally looks like me kids are doing "hear no evil, see no evil" - lol.
Alexa, I'm just impressed that when you say, "say cheese!" they face the camera and smile!! It was a fun day and that was the biggest antique tractor we saw. spw
I think that this one was such a great experience because not only did you see those awesome tractors but you even witnessed how it really works in the farm. You were able to get an idea about the process there. Nice! You'd definitely have something worthy to share with others in the future! :))
Thanks, Allannah, it was great fun for all of us! spw
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