The Corn Harvest

A combine harvester in my garden:

 

 

 

 

 

 

What was that about a picture and a thousand words?

c

 

 

 

70 responses to “The Corn Harvest”

  1. Gotta love it…the corn is in, and now winter can come.
    We’re a Deere family, too…My Grandad sold them and worked on them, from mowers up to combines…
    Which reminds me – the grandson needs a John Deere cap for Christmas!

    • Of course you cannot get a real John Deere cap unless you BUY the tractor, John is such a Baby he won’t even wear his (might get dirty!) and our tractor is not big, I park mine in the garage next to my car!! c

  2. Sorry to say this C, but that’s not a garden!! Oh my, your domains are huge…
    Loved the photos, but I will like to see one with you on it (inside the harvester, that is 😉 )

    • i was sat in the harvester for a bit, and it is huge.. and yes the gardens are not in the field! Though if I have my way we will keep creeping out there and taking over! c

    • No not the snow.. too early! Poor gnomies.. the corn is the part of the farms that I have nothing to do with so far, it is my boundary if you like, though my aim is to take it over and put it into grass for lots of Daisys!!! (evil laughter) . Time will tell.. I am a pretty determined wee thing.. c

  3. I was wondering when you’d start the combine. When I was home 2 weeks ago, a few of the farmers were just beginning to clear their corn fields. Much of their attention had been focused on harvesting sugar beets. Watching a combine in action is really something to see. Operating one, I imagine, would grow pretty tiresome after, say, the 3rd 180* turn.

    • The combine that I was in yesterday is operated by satellite, it runs down the row, guided by the satellite, beeps, farmer turns then sits back and has another sleep until another beep tells him to tun again. He also has a big screen that is telling him the moisture content and fertiliser needs, and bushels per acre. and other random and awfully dull information. All as it is being mowed down. he can do 100 acres a day. These guys are not going to give up in a hurry. This is very big business. Because my animals do not eat corn I actually mix them beet shreds every morning. Maybe from your farmers!! c

      • Satellite guided? 100 acres a day? Those things must cost a fortune. Big business, indeed! In the ’90s, the sugar beets all went to a local Nutrasweet (aspartane) plant. I think it may have closed and I’ve no idea where they’re shipped to now.

        • the beet shreds are a by product of a plant like that. (nutrasweet, that IS interesting) . and yes these machines cost hundreds of thousands, i have millions of dollars of someone else’s equipment hooning around Uncles field this morning, they are discing now as well. These tenant farmers are in so deep to the dealerships and the seed companies they could not pull out of corn and beans. The equipment is crop specific. Though I spent quite some time trying to convince the farmer to plant sunflowers yesterday!! Think of it! a field of sunflowers, the bees would die of excitement. c

  4. Ah what wonderful pictures. Such a beautiful perspective of the fields just going on. I find looking at it all very calming – even among what I imagine is a lot of harvesting noise – from over in a big city. Happy weekend!

    • mm The fields are enormous Saffron. and you are right about the noise, the combines, tractors pulling trailers, semis. trucks, all thundering across the field. Then they dry the corn in the big silos/bins and they are horrendously noisy, and on every property except ours. We do not use corn at all. Hard to be GM free when we are surrounded in it but I do try.. c

    • I was allowed to sit in the passenger seat for a bit with my camera Cindy, if I promised not to give the lecture against big mono industrial GM farming destroying the land and its culture! haha, c

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