I know there have been a lot of these lately, but here is one more. This is all stuff that in at my neighbors hours, which is less than a quarter of a mile away from me, and I have been living here for over 10 but never had any clue most of this was there until last week. I first saw some of this years ago when I was raking hay for another neighbor and property right next to all of this stuff. I saw a few tractors, an IH Scout, some old cars and trucks and noted it, but never got around to looking at it until now. There is nothing much older than 1950, there are alot of trucks, ALOT of tractors and farm machinery (some of which I will show here), and a bunch of misc. junk laying around. All of this stuff is for sale and you can PM me if you are interested. I'll let the pictures do the rest of the talking....
More...Although this takes care of the rest of it. I know some of it was O.T., but what the heck, just go with it. Also, in alot of the pictures of junk piles there are plenty of interesting parts.
Well actually the one wagon sitting on the driveway is mine lol. When I first went out to this place I parked my car, got out and started looking at stuff, then came over the top of a hill and there my car was again! Only it had been transformed into a '63 and suddenly aged way more lol. Freaked me out for a second.
I like the Sheeps Foot roller. You almost never see them on the HAMB these days. Anybody know where I can get a lowering kit for it?
I come from farming roots and I could never understand driving a tractor out in the middle of nowhere and just leaving it. My grandfather never let a tractor sit outside to deteriorate. If anything he traded it in on a new model. The farmer down the road from where I live now is quite prosperous and the farm has been in the family for generations. He has a pole barn with every tractor they have ever owned. Must be 20-25 of them in there. About 4 years ago he started dragging out a couple a year and put for sale signs on them. They are all in runable condition and they never sit there for more than a couple of days and they are sold. Tractor collecting is big around here so an orphan usually finds a new home rather quickly. Frank