Nates interaction with son Zack as they work together - all fathers should glean from. Respect and fatherly love ! In return Zack, as a son shows his love and respect unto his father as well working their farming enterprise. A life lesson for all to learn and LIVE - WHAT AMERICA NEEDS MORE OF IN FAMILIES AND MARRIGES. ENJOY THEIR UTUBE CHANNEL. NEAT, HUMBLE RESPECTFUL INTERVIEW NATE.
Thanks for doing what you do Ryan. I'm originally from Durand and moved to Phoenix in my late teens after my grandparents sold the family farm. I still try to stay connected to farming because it's in my blood and your videos help me do that. Thanks man!
You know I never noticed that but I don’t think I’ve ever heard him say a negative thing about anything. The first thing he goes to when he’s asked any question is what he likes about it and what he can compliment. And he doesn’t harp on negative stuff. Really says a lot about why the whole family turned out as well as they did.
Thank you for interviewing a great and humble man. I watch Nate, Zach, and now Onyx work their farm every week on their channel. Love his stories and his work ethic. I grew up in the same era, and helped my grandad and uncles on their small dairy farm in upstate NY. I know the value of hard work and yet without all the fancy machinery. My favorite tractor was his 1968 Oliver 1800 fwd. That was the biggest and best of his small setup.
Nice to hear an interviewer who has been there done it, Mr. Johnson you can see his eye light up when the two of them talk about back in the day. God bless both men.
I was lucky enough to work for a farmer for two years after I got cut loose from my computer software job. Had my CDL...his dad was still alive and told me stories about farming with horses......amazing stuff!!
I’m fairly confident Nathan is the most impressive father of any RUclips farmer. Without a doubt but also without reason at hand,I have found him to be a very intelligent and interesting man.Theres no one who holds my interest more! Really enjoyed watching Thanks both
Actually there’s several including Ivers. Don’t have the following. Also Sonny farms. And then you have Farming Fixing the fabricating. You just never see Andy’s dad on RUclips well maybe once or twice but not often
Such a super humble and knowledgeable man. Nate remembers all the details. I love listening to him as I can relate everything he says to how I was raised with my father and grandfather farming in Indiana.
What a great memory and Brillant mind, and very easy on the eyes also. I love the channel Zack does a great job with the filming. He is really lucky Nate is always ready to help. Enjoy him while you can I miss mine every day. May God Bless you one and all.
WOW this was a true gold find, I thought gee that guy in the thumbnail looks a lot like Nate Johnson Father of Zack Johnson the Millennial Farmer. So I hit the thumbnail and bingo. I’ve heard more from Nate in 10mins than a whole year on Millennial.
My dad, uncle, and I farm together, the first and to this day only brand new off the showroom floor our farm has owned(we still use it) was a 1650 that my grandpa bought when he farmed yet. I love that oliver
Nathan's right, when the late 70's and early 80's saw the Pyramid land equity plan fail we saw a huge change in farm business management. I hope that men of Nate's generation can impress upon the younger gens' the lessons learned before history repeats itself because we didn't learn from it.
Hi to you Ryan. This is my first time watching you. To be honest the reason is I know Nate real well from his sons you tube millennial farmer, Zach Johnson. I have tons of respect for Nate, what a wonderful person he is and a pleasure to interact with him on his son’s channel. I found it extremely interesting to hear more of Nate’s farming history and his views on farming. Through his son’s channel we saw a lot of the Moline tractor that was the starting point for this interview. I sincerely enjoyed this interview with Nate Johnson. I respect him for the fine way he operates and such a kind and thoughtful person he is. Nice going Ryan and Nate. I will give your channel a go and see what I think. Thanks for this one. I will sign off with my signature I use from being an old farm boy in Iowa. My blessings to both of you. The Iowa farm boy. Steve. 😊👍👋✅🙏🇺🇸🇺🇸
Glad to be here thanks to Zach's shout-out. 😊 What I find interesting is that I never knew the Johnsons were livestock farmers before the RUclips channel. My grandfather was a dairy farmer in Southern California, and owned many (now) old tractors.
Great to hear Nates voice he never gets a separate microphone on that other channel . Thought I would only skim through but watched it all. Two mature guys highlighting changes in farming in recent history
Originally westendorf was made in smithland ia not much there anymore don’t forget some of the first loaders were WL30 lot’s of them on M’s and and 560’s
Opened my eyes to another perspective of farming. If I could go back in time, I would have taken up the offer my best friends father offered me. Grew up in southern Illinois and still miss it.
Great interview of Mr Nate Johnson Ryan , Cheers & Best Wishes Trevor.W.Bacelli. Biloela Qld Australia.🐕🐎🦄🦌🦬🐮🐂🐃🐄🐖🐗🐏🐑🐐🐨🐨🐨🐨🐨🐨🐨🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦃🐔🐓🦆🦢🏵🏵🏵🏵🏵🏵🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌻🌼🌴🍌🍍🥭🌽🌽
I worked for a friend that had a G-955 MM with a cab. I loved that tractor. I think the hood was about 12 feet long. No turbo, but you couldn't kill that tractor.
Great video, he don't talk that much on Zacks videos, enjoyed hearing them talk about farming that I remember in the 70s 80s and 90s when I farmed .A interview with Brian Sonne would show how cattle farming change through the years. They have a Farmall m they don't show much in thier videos.The Gerioks runs a bunch of old equipt on thier dairy operation in Wisconsin
Thanks to both of you for an interesting interview. I'm not a farmer, but dad and mom hail from the Howard Lake area and both grew up on farms. Dad wanted to farm, but the farm went to the eldest son. Dad tried to get started but at the time farmers could make more money from the "land bank" program and leave their land fallow than most farmers could afford to pay in rent. So dad couldn't make a go of it. But apparently, it's in my blood, because I enjoy watching the Johnson family work the farm. On mom's side of the family the original homestead dates back to 1876, and that's when they started the first farm. Both sides of my family had animals. My Dad's brother and son/cousin farmed but never had animals. They got up to around a thousand acres or more planted and did pretty well. My cousin had no son, so when he quit that was the end of that line. On mom's side no one wanted to farm. My uncle is still alive at 95. Thanks again for taking the time to do this interview I enjoyed the history.
I grew up helping to chop corn silage we also had a Fox two chopper. We split it with another farmer and helped each other with our single axle trucks. This was in Western Massachusetts, all good river bottom soil. This is a great video and brings back memories.
Good interview. My brother owns a 2150 Oliver FWA that is pretty much cherry. Spent a lot of it's life moving boats at a Marina on Lake Champlain. He uses it sometimes to make hay, but it's pretty large for most of his hay equipment, so haying and parades are what it does now. He figured out that between how many were made, when you minus out the extra heavy duty models, the Cockshutt branded ones and the few Oliver-White branded ones that there were 200-220 of his models produced. Super cool tractor. Thanks for the informative video!
Absolutely loved the interview! Great stories which inform us about the history of agriculture and how life presents challenges and requires changes to meet those challenges. Nate took some big risks to start farming but he worked smart and hard to achieve success. God bless Nate, his family and all farm families. 😊
Onawa is on the west ern Iowa border about dead center north and south wise in our area there aren't many farms that don't have a Westondorf loader tons of WL40 and 42's on every color of tractor that was made .Also there running gears bring a premium on sales back when wagons were 400 bu or less they were the one to have now mostly go under hay racks.Great Video
I tried farming in the 70's. My mode of operandi was to borrow money from the bank in the spring and pay it back in the fall. What was left over was your profit. Don't recall there ever being any profit.. Just to much money going out to get started. Realized you needed a father or someone to help. To much going out. Trying to buy equipment, rent ground, buy seed, herbicide, fertilizer. Had to hire someone to harvest. They were always busy with someone else. Couldn't win!
The cows wouldn't have got milked this afternoon, if I was still at home on the dairy farm. Started this morning watching Millennium farmer, followed the link to here. Watched the hour plus of this, and now You Tube is playing Zach on something called Life Wide Open Podcast. What a rabbit hole. I'm trying to get some office work done.
Watching this I think my grandpa and his John Deere 4010 that he bought brand new and is still farming with it would make a great story he’s here in southern Wisconsin
EZEE-ON had a quick attach loader. Back in 79’ already. Two 5/16 bolt a flip a couple levers and back away. We had two extension hoses made. Part of the frame is the stand. Very easy to unhook. I bet I can do it in 2 minutes if I really tried.
I bought that g750 in that steffes sale a few weeks back, they only made around 200 only in 1971, Minneapolis Moline had quit making tractors in that size, so Oliver made them for the die hard Moline guys. From my information more diesels were made than gas, so it makes theirs all the more rare.
Wouldn't mind running into Nate some time and visiting, we are with in a couple a couple of years of the same age, and have farmed through the same hard times and good times. Maybe one day were only 90 miles apart as the crow flys....
Nice interview with the guy who plays the father of the guy who plays the Millennial Farmer. Let's be honest, Zach would be plating trees if nor for Nate's knowledge and guidance
Perhaps, the complexity of farming is also contributing to low recruitment into the profession? In addition to the cost to break-in? Progress, we gain, but we also lose something. And, small grains need to get back into the rotation (somehow?)on those big cash grain farms. For the soil sake. Enjoyed this interview, this gentleman has worked hard his whole life-congrats!
@@RyanKelly-Wititan2 I don’t know about the us. But in the Netherlands plenty of young people want to farm, but the starting costs are just to high. You can’t start small and work your way up anymore, you have to start with millions of euros invested. My sister and brother in law started a dairy farm ten years ago. He was fortunate enough to have a older farmer that bought land and rented it to him for next to nothing, just to help. He now owns a farm and the majority of his land. But most young people don’t have a chance like that, very few retired farmers are willing to rent out land without making any profits just to help a young guy you barely know.
Yeah it’s interesting to hear about his story as well… I remember in a video awhile back he kinda talked with his wife in the planter tractor of how they used to do and how the farm was more important than she was. 😂
@@chrishankins905 if you like tractors and farming you better care about voting, y’all in Minnesota already let the Somali take over your state y’all better vote down here in Florida we red to the end y’all should be ashamed
Nates interaction with son Zack as they work together - all fathers should glean from. Respect and fatherly love ! In return Zack, as a son shows his love and respect unto his father as well working their farming enterprise. A life lesson for all to learn and LIVE -
WHAT AMERICA NEEDS MORE OF IN FAMILIES AND MARRIGES. ENJOY THEIR UTUBE CHANNEL.
NEAT, HUMBLE RESPECTFUL INTERVIEW NATE.
I'm glad Nate had warmed up to the camera over the years. You can learn a lot from guys like him
Thanks for doing what you do Ryan. I'm originally from Durand and moved to Phoenix in my late teens after my grandparents sold the family farm. I still try to stay connected to farming because it's in my blood and your videos help me do that. Thanks man!
I could listen to Nate talk all day. Zach should do a sit down talk with him and talk about the good old days
He did! Two or three years ago. They did a tailgate session.
I believe Zach has interviewed Nate on Zach's podcast also
Nate is amazing man. He never talks bad about any tractor or anything. God bless him and his family.
Their whole family just seems like great people.
You know I never noticed that but I don’t think I’ve ever heard him say a negative thing about anything. The first thing he goes to when he’s asked any question is what he likes about it and what he can compliment. And he doesn’t harp on negative stuff. Really says a lot about why the whole family turned out as well as they did.
Nate is such a down to earth
good man. Got to love the old farming stories. Could listen to them all day long . This was a great life time story.
Great down to earth humble man.
Nate is so smart, his memory recall is amazing.
Thank you for interviewing a great and humble man. I watch Nate, Zach, and now Onyx work their farm every week on their channel. Love his stories and his work ethic. I grew up in the same era, and helped my grandad and uncles on their small dairy farm in upstate NY. I know the value of hard work and yet without all the fancy machinery. My favorite tractor was his 1968 Oliver 1800 fwd. That was the biggest and best of his small setup.
Nice to hear an interviewer who has been there done it, Mr. Johnson you can see his eye light up when the two of them talk about back in the day. God bless both men.
I was lucky enough to work for a farmer for two years after I got cut loose from my computer software job. Had my CDL...his dad was still alive and told me stories about farming with horses......amazing stuff!!
The family still has the spool of wire with knots in it to drop the corn or beans.....whatever they were planting.
Nate is an amazing guy.I’ll watch anything with him involved
THANK YOU FOR STORING THIS GREAT HISTORY... PLEASE CONTINUE 😅😊🎉🎉❤❤
I subcribed to Millennial farmer when he released his second video,been a fan of Nates since,this video is great,what a genuinely nice man,thank you!
Nate remembers it all, so interesting. Now three generations to watch.
I’m fairly confident Nathan is the most impressive father of any RUclips farmer.
Without a doubt but also without reason at hand,I have found him to be a very intelligent and interesting man.Theres no one who holds my interest more!
Really enjoyed watching
Thanks both
Nate and Dougo are the best
George from Gierock farms is also amazing.
Robert Welker and Brian Sonne would to be in the same category.
Actually there’s several including Ivers. Don’t have the following. Also Sonny farms. And then you have Farming Fixing the fabricating. You just never see Andy’s dad on RUclips well maybe once or twice but not often
You managed to get a better interview out of him than Zach ever has lol
Zac wouldn't be able to sit & listen that long! LOL. Both great people.
Such a super humble and knowledgeable man. Nate remembers all the details. I love listening to him as I can relate everything he says to how I was raised with my father and grandfather farming in Indiana.
What a great memory and Brillant mind, and very easy on the eyes also. I love the channel Zack does a great job with the filming. He is really lucky Nate is always ready to help. Enjoy him while you can I miss mine every day. May God Bless you one and all.
Enjoyed the interview with Nate. Very interesting history of his farm life!
WOW this was a true gold find, I thought gee that guy in the thumbnail looks a lot like Nate Johnson Father of Zack Johnson the Millennial Farmer.
So I hit the thumbnail and bingo.
I’ve heard more from Nate in 10mins than a whole year on Millennial.
Thank you so much for providing Pre-Melinial Farmer- family history!
New sub, belled and all!
Great job!
Enjoyed listening to this great history! Thanks for sharing
I put a lot of hours on a Oliver 1650 with a Westendorf moving round bales. It was a great setup for the time period.
My dad, uncle, and I farm together, the first and to this day only brand new off the showroom floor our farm has owned(we still use it) was a 1650 that my grandpa bought when he farmed yet. I love that oliver
Nathan's right, when the late 70's and early 80's saw the Pyramid land equity plan fail we saw a huge change in farm business management. I hope that men of Nate's generation can impress upon the younger gens' the lessons learned before history repeats itself because we didn't learn from it.
Hi to you Ryan. This is my first time watching you. To be honest the reason is I know Nate real well from his sons you tube millennial farmer, Zach Johnson. I have tons of respect for Nate, what a wonderful person he is and a pleasure to interact with him on his son’s channel.
I found it extremely interesting to hear more of Nate’s farming history and his views on farming. Through his son’s channel we saw a lot of the Moline tractor that was the starting point for this interview.
I sincerely enjoyed this interview with Nate Johnson. I respect him for the fine way he operates and such a kind and thoughtful person he is. Nice going Ryan and Nate.
I will give your channel a go and see what I think. Thanks for this one. I will sign off with my signature I use from being an old farm boy in Iowa.
My blessings to both of you.
The Iowa farm boy. Steve.
😊👍👋✅🙏🇺🇸🇺🇸
I also subscribed to Millennial farmer. Awesome family!
Zach, your dad is awesome!
Always love hearing the stories from the guys that came before us. Thanks for sharing your stories, Nate. Love the Minnie-Mo.
Glad to be here thanks to Zach's shout-out. 😊
What I find interesting is that I never knew the Johnsons were livestock farmers before the RUclips channel. My grandfather was a dairy farmer in Southern California, and owned many (now) old tractors.
I love Nate, seems like a down to earth humble man
Nate is a legend.
Great interview. That T-shirt Indian motorcycles must be very old
Great to hear Nates voice he never gets a separate microphone on that other channel . Thought I would only skim through but watched it all. Two mature guys highlighting changes in farming in recent history
I'd like to see nate and the videos more was that and that's fun
I love hearing the stories and learning from others experiences. Thank you for sharing this.
Originally westendorf was made in smithland ia not much there anymore don’t forget some of the first loaders were WL30 lot’s of them on M’s and and 560’s
Fantastic interview, to find the post 70,s history and story prior to the actor, that plays Zach.[/joke off.] Regards from Melbourne Australia.
Opened my eyes to another perspective of farming. If I could go back in time, I would have taken up the offer my best friends father offered me. Grew up in southern Illinois and still miss it.
Great interview of Mr Nate Johnson Ryan , Cheers & Best Wishes Trevor.W.Bacelli. Biloela Qld Australia.🐕🐎🦄🦌🦬🐮🐂🐃🐄🐖🐗🐏🐑🐐🐨🐨🐨🐨🐨🐨🐨🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦃🐔🐓🦆🦢🏵🏵🏵🏵🏵🏵🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌻🌼🌴🍌🍍🥭🌽🌽
I worked for a friend that had a G-955 MM with a cab. I loved that tractor. I think the hood was about 12 feet long. No turbo, but you couldn't kill that tractor.
Great video, he don't talk that much on Zacks videos, enjoyed hearing them talk about farming that I remember in the 70s 80s and 90s when I farmed .A interview with Brian Sonne would show how cattle farming change through the years. They have a Farmall m they don't show much in thier videos.The Gerioks runs a bunch of old equipt on thier dairy operation in Wisconsin
Great job Ryan , my hat off
to Mr Johnson .
Nate, The Living Legend! Wealth of knowledge
Really nice, humble person .
Brilliant history Mr Jonstons a wealth of knowledge
Thanks to both of you for an interesting interview. I'm not a farmer, but dad and mom hail from the Howard Lake area and both grew up on farms. Dad wanted to farm, but the farm went to the eldest son. Dad tried to get started but at the time farmers could make more money from the "land bank" program and leave their land fallow than most farmers could afford to pay in rent. So dad couldn't make a go of it. But apparently, it's in my blood, because I enjoy watching the Johnson family work the farm. On mom's side of the family the original homestead dates back to 1876, and that's when they started the first farm. Both sides of my family had animals. My Dad's brother and son/cousin farmed but never had animals. They got up to around a thousand acres or more planted and did pretty well. My cousin had no son, so when he quit that was the end of that line. On mom's side no one wanted to farm. My uncle is still alive at 95. Thanks again for taking the time to do this interview I enjoyed the history.
I grew up helping to chop corn silage we also had a Fox two chopper. We split it with another farmer and helped each other with our single axle trucks. This was in Western Massachusetts, all good river bottom soil.
This is a great video and brings back memories.
I knew this one was going to be good Ryan,awesome job
Good interview. My brother owns a 2150 Oliver FWA that is pretty much cherry. Spent a lot of it's life moving boats at a Marina on Lake Champlain. He uses it sometimes to make hay, but it's pretty large for most of his hay equipment, so haying and parades are what it does now. He figured out that between how many were made, when you minus out the extra heavy duty models, the Cockshutt branded ones and the few Oliver-White branded ones that there were 200-220 of his models produced. Super cool tractor. Thanks for the informative video!
Absolutely loved the interview! Great stories which inform us about the history of agriculture and how life presents challenges and requires changes to meet those challenges. Nate took some big risks to start farming but he worked smart and hard to achieve success. God bless Nate, his family and all farm families. 😊
This was a good one. Good job Ryan. Now try for Grandpa Larson
I'd love to
I definitely agree about interviewing Grandpa Larson.
Great interview, Nate!
Yes good man an good review that my favorite farm show on RUclips love you guy
We farm about 45 minutes away from him. Zach did a video on our farm back in 2020 but it was never published to his channel.
Thanks for this interview very interesting watching from the UK
Greetings from Lisbon - Portugal
Great interview! Enjoyed the farm and tractor stories!
Great interview brought up a lot of my equipment memories good times
Favorite tractor in the fleet!
Still have my Trojan magnetic clip. Used it for 39 years in the semi.
Nate.. super cool!
He is the salt of the earth as far as I’m concerned. I’m 180 degrees his opposite as far as farming is concerned, but I respect him. He is a farmer!
Thanks for the great stories 👍🏻
Great video ❤
Finally another Oliver-related video!
Great interview
Onawa is on the west ern Iowa border about dead center north and south wise in our area there aren't many farms that don't have a Westondorf loader tons of WL40 and 42's on every color of tractor that was made .Also there running gears bring a premium on sales back when wagons were 400 bu or less they were the one to have now mostly go under hay racks.Great Video
What a great interview!
Excellent video and to hear some of Nate's storirs was interesting. It is always great to hear the history before it is to late.
I tried farming in the 70's. My mode of operandi was to borrow money from the bank in the spring and pay it back in the fall. What was left over was your profit. Don't recall there ever being any profit.. Just to much money going out to get started. Realized you needed a father or someone to help. To much going out. Trying to buy equipment, rent ground, buy seed, herbicide, fertilizer. Had to hire someone to harvest. They were always busy with someone else. Couldn't win!
I drove and used a 4430 back in the early 1970's. That sure was a nice tractor.
The cows wouldn't have got milked this afternoon, if I was still at home on the dairy farm. Started this morning watching Millennium farmer, followed the link to here. Watched the hour plus of this, and now You Tube is playing Zach on something called Life Wide Open Podcast. What a rabbit hole. I'm trying to get some office work done.
If only the actor who plays the millennial farmer could be this cool. 😂
Good video, I didn't know he bought that from my home town
I like seeing nate
Hope one day you could get Jim on the show.
Watching this I think my grandpa and his John Deere 4010 that he bought brand new and is still farming with it would make a great story he’s here in southern Wisconsin
EZEE-ON had a quick attach loader. Back in 79’ already. Two 5/16 bolt a flip a couple levers and back away. We had two extension hoses made. Part of the frame is the stand. Very easy to unhook. I bet I can do it in 2 minutes if I really tried.
Zach said he would be quiet in his video 😅 sounds like it😂
I can't believe Zach would make all that noise while his dad is doing a interview.
zach is the drama queen
I bought that g750 in that steffes sale a few weeks back, they only made around 200 only in 1971, Minneapolis Moline had quit making tractors in that size, so Oliver made them for the die hard Moline guys. From my information more diesels were made than gas, so it makes theirs all the more rare.
Thanks, I thought they were rare.
I really enjoyed this video with Zach's Dad. AKA Nate 😊
Dang kids always being noisy when adults are trying to have a conversation....
Nice interview! To bad didn't get into current farm environment and his thoughts vs past regarding expansion etc. He's a great guy
Wouldn't mind running into Nate some time and visiting, we are with in a couple a couple of years of the same age, and have farmed through the same hard times and good times. Maybe one day were only 90 miles apart as the crow flys....
Excellent
I worked for a seed company some years ago. I told my boss that I wish our trucks was as nice as the farmer trucks
Really surprised you got Nate to do a interview - he never wants to be a part of the #1 farmer U- Tube channel !
Millennial Farmer doing his RUclips in the background
Zach in the background blowing out the planter.
Nice interview with the guy who plays the father of the guy who plays the Millennial Farmer.
Let's be honest, Zach would be plating trees if nor for Nate's knowledge and guidance
It would be nice to see pictures of some of the equipment as you’re talking about them.
Perhaps, the complexity of farming is also contributing to low recruitment into the profession? In addition to the cost to break-in? Progress, we gain, but we also lose something. And, small grains need to get back into the rotation (somehow?)on those big cash grain farms. For the soil sake. Enjoyed this interview, this gentleman has worked hard his whole life-congrats!
I don't think there's a problem with people wanting to farm, it's that there isn't enough opportunity
@@RyanKelly-Wititan2 I don’t know about the us. But in the Netherlands plenty of young people want to farm, but the starting costs are just to high. You can’t start small and work your way up anymore, you have to start with millions of euros invested.
My sister and brother in law started a dairy farm ten years ago. He was fortunate enough to have a older farmer that bought land and rented it to him for next to nothing, just to help. He now owns a farm and the majority of his land. But most young people don’t have a chance like that, very few retired farmers are willing to rent out land without making any profits just to help a young guy you barely know.
Love the history lesson
Awesome to see this. If possible, reach out to chet and doug larson. Dougo has some good stories to tell.
Yeah it’s interesting to hear about his story as well… I remember in a video awhile back he kinda talked with his wife in the planter tractor of how they used to do and how the farm was more important than she was. 😂
I'd love to sit down with them
Nate has talked more in this video than in all of Zach’s combined! I enjoyed it 👍🇺🇸. MAGA Trump 2024. Vote vote vote
FDT
Vote blue. Don't put a felon in the white house.
@@dmk1529if the dems get in, small farms may be a thing of the past.
Because everyone comes to a tractor channel because they wanna know what your political opinion is 😂
@@chrishankins905 if you like tractors and farming you better care about voting, y’all in Minnesota already let the Somali take over your state y’all better vote down here in Florida we red to the end y’all should be ashamed
He was a good guy. I enjoyed his story
He forgot to mention that the Moline survived a building falling on it on the wind storm.
That tractor would look better in its work clothes. It's in nice original condition for its age!
We want to see him
Thnak yoy!!