Antique Horse drawn Potato Digger

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2016
  • I am not sure of the age, or even the make of this antique machine. I am not even positive of the proper use of it !! It was in pretty decent shape for it's age, when we acquired it, in fact, we only had to grease and oil the components to be able to use it for this video. If anyone has comments, please add them. Enjoy !!!

Комментарии • 353

  • @tractorman4461
    @tractorman4461 4 года назад +7

    There's always a learning curve when using a 'new to you' tool, whether the tool is brand new or a hundred years old. For the first try, I'd say two thumbs up. When saving old equipment from the junk yards, the point is not necessarily to be efficient, the point is to preserve these examples in the stages in agricultural technology so we can appreciate how hard life was for those that came before us. All things evolve and all the stages of evolution in machinery are equally important.

  • @kagnewmp12
    @kagnewmp12 Год назад +13

    I am 70 now and when I was just a boy I was able to watch my Grandfather use this same potato picker both with his big Belgian work horses and with his Farmall M but if I remember correctly he also used an old shortened hay cutter to cut the potato tops off at dirt level and all the kids would follow behind and pull them off the potato row. This same picker sits undisturbed in the equipment barn covered by a 50 year old Army tarp at my Grandfathers Farm. He farmed from age 7 to the age of 81 and lived to be 90 and was married at 15 to my Grandmother for just over 75 years.

  • @dieselgypsy1100
    @dieselgypsy1100 4 года назад +10

    I have one that is almost identical.

  • @victorjeffers1993
    @victorjeffers1993 Год назад

    Love to see old farm equipment still being used today ! I'm 59 an remember my dad owning a cub tractor on my grandmother's small farm ! But we didn't have a potato digging machine just a matic an our backs digging them up ! Good video thanks for sharing ! 👍👍

  • @lockandload699
    @lockandload699 Год назад +1

    We did about an acre of "spuds" a year and dug them all with that very same digger. We would hill the rows and would be sure the moldboard was clean, otherwise the dirt/refuse, would tend to bunch up. We pulled it with a little Ford tractor and went slow. It worked perfectly to the point where the potatoes were laid on top of the "tops" directly behind the digger.

  • @labluv4146
    @labluv4146 5 лет назад +1

    My grandfather farmed in Bridgehampton, NY. He would chemically burn off the vine then dig (he died at 52 because of the chemicals!. The migrant workers would put the potatoes in a burlap bag then they would throw the bag to my gf on his flatbed Dodge to stack up. I was driving, or at least I thought I was, it was following the tractor furous. He would move me over to turn it around I was 10! Fond fond memories of a by gone era, glad I was there!

  • @JohnDoe-jq5wy
    @JohnDoe-jq5wy 6 лет назад +3

    Yes yes, I grew up with a similar digger. The person in the set of the digger is very essential for smooth operation. We had several acres of potatoes to dig every fall. Very important to keep the weeds out of the rows. We let the vines frost and dry. The machine was better than the alternative; a potato fork. We picked up the potatoes by had and put them in five gallon buckets.

  • @georgeboyer8158
    @georgeboyer8158 4 года назад +1

    My Grandfather had one of these and pulled it with a C Farmall. After he sold out in 1965, I lost track of the digger although I'm sure one of my Uncle's (estates that is) has it. At our farm, our garden was in an odd shaped piece of land located in a tight spot. The potato patch was the oddest and tightest part of the odd and tight. We used a lister behind a B Farmall to turn the potatoes after using a lawn mower to clip the vines. Later we used a first generation John Deere garden tractor. Lotsa memories of lotsa good food.

  • @Daveinet
    @Daveinet 6 лет назад +3

    We had the exact same potato digger when we were kids growing up. When we bought it, I think the front wheels were already gone. We adapted it, so it would hook on to a drawbar from the old Ford 3 point hitch. This way the depth was controlled by the hydraulics on the tractor. Two things we learned. Before digging the potatoes, we would run over the rows with a lawn mower raised all the way up. This got rid of all the plants that would otherwise tangle up in the track. The second thing was to have a rider on the back to push all the weeds and dirt down in the track. This kept it from building up in the front and clogging up. It actually worked pretty well once we got the hang of it. We had enough potatoes to feed a big eating family of 7 - 5 kids. Potatoes would last year round with enough to plant for the following year.

  • @mlauntube
    @mlauntube Год назад

    I learned much more from your difficulties than I would have from video from a manufacturer doing it with perfect conditions.

  • @allenbuck5589
    @allenbuck5589 Год назад +1

    Man that’s to cool. The engineering that’s in that old tool. Thanks again

  • @bradmonrean2307

    Very impressive! I've seen much larger tractors hooked to potato diggers. That little Farmall did a good job!

  • @northernheaven2503
    @northernheaven2503 Год назад

    Love the pulling power of these antique little tractors. Even having less hp than the average lawn mower!

  • @ilfarmboy
    @ilfarmboy 5 лет назад +13

    farming is always a learning experience no matter how old you are

  • @williamdavidson9009
    @williamdavidson9009 7 лет назад +10

    Great to see you trying to make old iron work. Makes you appreciate the guy who figured it all out and made it work. Besides it is fun!!

  • @1959hogryder
    @1959hogryder 4 года назад +2

    I grew up on potato-farm in northern Maine ... When I was very young , we still had the 2 row tractor -drawn potato -diggers drawn by our 2 mid 50's Farmall 400's into even the early 70's as we slowly acquired a potato combine or two .. { plus more powerful tractors to handle the horsepower / hydraulic needs for them } ... and began gearing up for the eventual change-over of this newer equipment . Ya , looks like you'd want to pull the weeds and potato -tops first seeing as how the conveyors are dependent on that axle rotating for their movement , to keep all that from bunching up and giving the dirt and whatever , time to sift through and not impede the potatoes ..... Normally , this would require an operator in that digger's - seat to raise/lower the blade ....and possibly control engagement of the digger conveyor -lags (?) { I'd have to see it up close and personal to figure it } At some point in their conversion , I believe the digger controls were lengthened and possibly otherwise modified to be reached by the tractor operator ....

  • @CountryFamily
    @CountryFamily 6 лет назад

    Those old Farmall A's were used a lot for hilling potatoes too. We have a couple of A's that used to work the garden a lot. Now there are mostly for fun. 😀

  • @michaelnentwig8465
    @michaelnentwig8465 6 лет назад +4

    its all about having fun! Thanks

  • @andrewwilson6085
    @andrewwilson6085 Год назад

    This reminds me of potato picking as a child in 1960s. We used a spinner to dig the potatoes out, but the problems were same! Great video!

  • @kennethjackson7574
    @kennethjackson7574 2 года назад +1

    That tractor looks just like the first one I had, except your’s has a muffler. And one of the things I inherited and still have is a five-tine potato rake! It’s like a heavy-duty ground rake but with all surfaces rounded and smoothed to minimize damage to the potatoes.