Posts Tagged ‘farming’

PICKING CORN AT CHRISTMAS TIME December 15, 2025

December 15, 2025

When I was growing up on an Illinois farm in the 1950’s and ‘60’s, we had mounted corn pickers without cabs. If a farmer was fortunate, he might have a “heat houser,” a canvas frame with a clear section to see through that would break the wind. But heat housers had no roofs, and if it was raining, sleeting, or snowing, things could be miserable.

I don’t remember what year it was, but I remember that the weather was bad that fall, forcing us to pick corn nearly until Christmas. By early December, the fields were a muddy icy mess and driving became even more of a challenge than usual. It was quite common to break through ice into a mud hole and then struggle to get out to continue picking corn. Those old tractors had “Armstrong” steering-your arms had better be strong because the only power steering available was whatever muscle you had in your arms.

Dressing for such an ordeal was a production. First, the tractor operator might don long underwear and heavy woolen socks, followed by blue jeans and then by coveralls. When insulated coveralls and hooded sweatshirts became available, those of us forced to work in the cold rejoiced. The tractor operator would also wear work boots or the knee-high rubber boots the Brits call Wellingtons. There were no such things as insertable foot warmers. Frost bitten toes were a real possibility. The last piece of clothing would be heavy fuzzy yellow work gloves. These gloves were far thicker than the ones worn in the summer for baling hay or straw. The tractor driver might also have a scarf wrapped around his neck; that scarf could be pulled up to cover one’s mouth when necessary.

How cold could it get? On the Illinois prairie, wind chill is a major force to be reckoned with. With the wind whipping out of the northwest at 40 miles per hour and the temperature dropping well below freezing, those farmers likely suffered the same exposure to cold as Antarctic expeditions.  

When my dad was little, corn was picked by hand, with pickers walking through the field and throwing the ears into narrow wagons that were designed to fit between rows. Those wagons had side boards or “bang boards,” so-called because the ears of corn would strike those boards and then fall into the wagon. Even up through the late 1930’s, one of the local farm boys won a national hand corn picking contest. Some of the great baseball pitchers in the early part of the twentieth century were supposed to have developed strong wrists by the combination of picking corn by hand and milking cows by hand. I can only imagine how truly wretched it would be to be slogging through a muddy icy corn field while picking corn by hand in the middle of a December sleet storm. But somehow, those old-time farmers managed.

I watch videos of entire families sitting comfortably in enclosed cabs with GPS, wireless, and sound systems, and I feel as if I am an alien from another planet. I am happy for those families, that they don’t have to suffer as did their grandparents or great-grandparents. I rejoice that parents are sharing the joy of the land with their children. But it’s not bad to remember that we are able to enjoy the land because someone who came before us was willing to do the tough things, like picking corn at Christmastime.

ARCHIBALD THE ANKLE UPDATE NOVEMBER 20, 2025 OF POWER TAKE OFFS AND WHEELCHAIR BRAKES

November 20, 2025

I learned to drive tractors when I was 10 years old, and one of the many lessons Dad taught me was to respect the power take off. The power take off shaft sat below the platform holding the driver’s seat. We connected power take offs to mounted corn pickers, self-unloading wagons, and a host of other implements.

The power take off transmitted power from the tractor to such things as snapping rolls on corn pickers, the rollers that gathered in the corn stalks. Another potential disaster was self-unloading wagons. These wagons had an auger at the base of the wagon that would steadily feed the grain out a spout. In the days when small feedlots were operating, many farmers would drive these wagons along feed bunks, dumping feed for their cattle. Disabling the power take off was not a big deal; however, there were many people who were so impatient that they would stop the tractor but not disengage the power take off. The results of this impatience were disastrous, leading to loss of fingers, hands, arms, feet, legs, and sometimes even life. Anyone foolish enough to be riding on top of a load of feed when the power take off was engaged was simply begging for a horrific injury. Some people have been injured or killed when their clothing has caught in the rotating power take off shaft.

In an effort to keep weight off Archibald, my injured left ankle, I am scooting around our house in a cheapie wheelchair. This morning as I was exiting the bathing room, scooting one of our blue rubber chairs to the door, and then transferring to the wheelchair, I began considering the potential for disaster if the brakes were not properly set on my wheelchair. To set the brakes, I must pull back on two levers, one over each wheel. While those maneuvers only take a few seconds, there’s a real temptation to leave the brakes off in hopes that the wheelchair will not suddenly scoot out from under me, leaving me to crash on the floor. And as I was reminding myself of the absolute need for patience, I remembered the lessons of the power take off.

Isaiah 60:22 tells us, “…At the right time, I, the LORD, will make it happen.” Many times, we want progress and results and we want them immediately. Sadly, most of us are far more likely to pray, “Lord, give me patience NOW!!!”

Somehow, we don’t think that the God who has spoken the universe into existence with a single word, the God who has created us and who knows us better than we do ourselves, that same God doesn’t really know what He is doing and should obey our whimsies and demands. We are so impatient that we are unwilling to take the smallest steps to ensure our own safety, such as disengaging the power take off on a tractor or setting the brakes on a wheelchair. Many of us are so ungrateful that we blame God when disasters strike, even though we have failed to take the necessary steps to prevent them.

This morning, Archibald and I have made it safely through the bathing room and dressing areas and are now ensconced in the sitting room, where we will spend most of the rest of the day. (Chair yoga is becoming a thing!) But I continue to pray for all those who must use wheelchairs-and tractors with power take offs, that we all will have patience so that our foolishness will not result in disasters.