I've lived on a farm for all but two years of my life (ages 17-19); I'm 21. Our family's farms are small (totalling only around 500 acres, give or take some more land that we rent), but I've also worked with larger farmers on various projects (those that have over double the amount of land we do). "I bleed Green."
Originally posted by: AntisociaL
Originally posted by: iwearnosox
Congratulations, you're a redneck! :beer:
They held a combine demolition derby at our county fair this year. Now thats redneck.
It's more redneck to hold a combine demolition derby with THOUSANDS of attendees every year, that is well known in the region. Fairfield County, Ohio.
Originally posted by: Amused
And yet farming isn't a lowly job. It requires not only hard labor, but an education and signifigant knowledge.
And most of you seem to have never met a farmer, and have them confused with white trash trailer park residents... which they are far from.
*Successful* farming isn't a lowly job.
I know a lot of "farmers" that have no "education" to speak of (including high school), don't know ANYTHING about efficiency or basic logic, and still manage to farm hundreds of acres. They usually make next to nothing, and are generally regarded as the "trash" of the farmers. That'd be Perry County, Ohio.
Oh yeah, those same farmers that generally don't have a clue are frequently found in trailer parks.
Originally posted by: SlitheryDee
The rednecks that you so like to make fun of most likely do the "dirty-work" for the respectable farmers that you're trying to lump them with.
Farming may be dirty, but it's not the kind of "dirty-work" that you are implying it is. That being menial labor that is only for folk who you perceive to be inferior to yourself.
Farming, in general, deserves a lot of respect, but I can understand why people (that have limited observance of farming) would think otherwise. There are a lot of clueless farmers out there, that bring a bad name to those that are otherwise very respectable.
Originally posted by: Pikachu
How many of the numbnuts posting here could afford the "redneck's" $300K combine? Yeah, that's what I thought. :roll:
Many farmers cannot initially afford it either, and take out 15 year loans on them, to pay them off... and frequently get those loans extended. That is the smaller farmers, at least. Those that have decent sized farms could probably pay off a combine with cash or w/ a few year loan.
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: Sukhoi
A lot of city dwellers need to understand there is a big difference between farmers and redneck white trash.
Yes, farmer = someone who gets up at 5AM every morning and works 14-hour days doing all manner of physical labor on their farm.
Redneck white trash = farmer's drunken cousin who moved to the nearest small town and hasn't done a day of farm work in his life.
No, a farmer is someone that works as many hours as he has to, and has the skills and knowledge to make sure that everything that needs to get done is completed on schedule. He can manage resources, and knows exactly what is happening on all parts of the farm(s) at all times.
A farm hand/worker is someone who gets up at 5AM every morning and works 14-hour days doing all manner of physical labor in the farm.
Smaller farmers are typically both the farmer and the worker.
Your definition of redneck white trash stands.
Originally posted by: sygyzy
Originally posted by: Amused
I find it uniquely funny how people make fun of the very hand that feeds them.
You all make fun of farmers, yet without them the vast majority of you would starve to death.
Did you know that many farmers are subsized by the government? That they are told/forced to farm even when there isd absolutely no need for their crop? That huge silos hold their grains with months or years of excess? And no, this is not "in case of an emergency." Farmers obviously are extremely valuable and provide us food but farming isn't what it used to be and being a farmer now is not the same as it was 50-100 years ago.
Farmers are sometimes also forced to *not* farm, on occasion. Just FYI.
Originally posted by: jkersenbr
From first-hand experience I would summarize that Cats are better corn combines, but nothing eats wheat like a CTS John Deere. In most wheat conditions, they can cut a 36' wide swath at over 5 miles per hour (that is about 25 acres/hour/machine)
:thumbsup:, though my preferred crop is corn, for no rational reason.
