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Notice that the grain cart tractor has tracks to make it easier to get through muddy conditions. |
Randy hasn't been in the "pilot" seat of the combine for three years now. But he still finds a way to hitch a ride in the buddy seat.
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From our last harvest as active farmers - Taken June 13, 2022, on the first day of harvest that year. |
You can take the farmer out of active farming. But you can't take away the interest ... even from the sidelines.
Our wheat was harvested by Frederick Harvesting based in Alden last Friday, June 27. Tye and Todd, who now farm our ground, contract with Frederick's to custom harvest their crop on their owned and rented farm ground. It didn't take long for two custom machines to get through our wheat acres, since Millers only planted 100 acres to wheat on us this year.
Randy had ridden with the harvesting crew earlier Friday afternoon as they worked on ground we had previously rented and farmed. During a ride on both the grain cart and the combine, he had learned that they would likely move to our ground later that afternoon and evening.
It was my birthday, Randy had planned to take me Hutchinson for supper and a few errands. When we found out the timing, I volunteered to postpone my celebration. It certainly wouldn't be the first time my birthday and wheat harvest coincided. During my childhood and youth, harvest often overlapped with my birthday. As farm partners for the past 44 years, the harvest and birthday collision continued, though the start of harvest has seemed to creep earlier and earlier during our married life. However, I spent plenty of birthdays in the harvest truck, delivering meals, making parts runs or riding in the combine.
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A long-ago harvest as the wheat truck driver at my parents' farm in Pratt County |
However, Randy said we would continue with the birthday plans. As we returned from Hutchinson near dusk, we saw two combines in the field on our ground. Randy went home and changed clothes and then went to the field to catch another ride. I told him to send me photos. Usually, that means I get a couple of hastily-snapped pictures. But I guess it was a birthday gift that he pulled through with a few more this time!
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Kim's County Line photo From 2022 |
It's different for the family writer and photographer to be on the sidelines, too. I've literally taken thousands of harvest photos during my lifetime. But I was glad to get a few photos from Randy anyway!
It's kind of an inside family joke that Randy was always glancing at the yield monitor while he harvested wheat. His attraction to the yield monitor has not faded, since that was one of the photos I received.
I also got several showing the number of pounds that went into the grain cart.
This harvest has been quite a marathon for Kansas farmers in our area. While farmers are reluctant to complain about summer rains, intermittent rain showers - and some gully washers - have made for a stop-and-start harvest.
Frederick Harvesting used a tractor with tracks to help them traverse muddy fields.
Quality and yield have gone down for many - right along with downed wheat.
Since I began blogging in 2010, I have kept track of the start date for wheat harvest.
2011: June 10
2012: May 26 (an anomaly and the earliest harvest, by far, we've ever had)
2013: June 21
2014: June 17
2015: June 20
2016: June 15
2017: June 12
2018: June 12
2019: June 26
2020: June 16
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From our last harvest as active farmers - June 2022 |
We don't have the yield totals for our wheat crop this year. Harvesting crews are more concerned about getting to the next farm and farmer's wheat crop than recapping yields from already harvested clients. And that's the way it should be. We will find out eventually. After watching the yield monitor, Randy thinks it was better than he expected after listening to other area farmers, so we'll see.