Harvesting oats in the West of Ireland with a New Holland Clayson 1545 Combine Harvester

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  • Опубликовано: 9 ноя 2022
  • At the end of August, the harvest is in full swing in the West of Ireland. A few decades back, when the summers were warmer and drier in this part of the world, this land produced great crops of oats and barley - nowadays, with the shift in global weather patterns due climate change, the climate in the West of Ireland has become very unpredictable, and in general much damper and cooler. So farmers needs a bit of good fortune to get a well ripened crop from their fields - and Tim Lehane, local farmer in West Cork, could count himself lucky with a field of golden oats ready to be cut! So an old New Holland Clayson 1545 Combine Harvester was pulled out and put to use.
    A few years ago, we attempted to grow oats on our farm - we weren't into film making back then so only have a few photos to show:
    • How To Make The Best P...
    but we can confirm that it is a labour intensive but rewarding job when all goes right! But getting it right can be tricky - and doing it all by hand compared with a Combine Harvester is a different story again...
    Tim Lehane didn't only bring in a great yield of grain from the field that day, he also managed to raise €6435 of donations towards the Irish Air Ambulance Service. Well done!!!
    Ok, here are some important website links. Please check them out..
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    here's our two online stores where you can see some of the craft things we make and sell..
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    If you would like to help and encourage us then please do! It's easy and means such a lot..
    One-off donation - www.paypal.me/wayoutwestblowi...
    and here's our Patreon page where you can see more of our plans and dreams. (Remember even 5 dollars would make a BIG difference to us and we'd be very grateful.)
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    Thank you!
    Sandra & Tim
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Комментарии • 75

  • @davidquerry8869
    @davidquerry8869 Год назад +34

    Sandra, I seriously think you should look into reading for childrens audio books. You could make the phone book sound exciting.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +9

      Haha, I'll test that theory one day! Will consider your suggestion, you are not the first, so there must be something to my tone and pronunciation...

    • @paganpride464
      @paganpride464 Год назад +2

      @@WayOutWestx2 I watch your videos with my two youngest and they like listening to you.

    • @davidhaywood8029
      @davidhaywood8029 Год назад +2

      I'll add my vote: Irish meets German (with Ireland in the ascendant) is an unexpectedly soothing combination to my tinnitus-ridden ears...

  • @tonydewey3023
    @tonydewey3023 3 месяца назад

    Spent ten years selling spare parts for clayson combines in hampshire, good memories

  • @SteveeCee
    @SteveeCee Год назад +7

    What a lovely feeling of wellbeing we get after watching your Blog Sandra and Tim. Thank you.

  • @rubygray7749
    @rubygray7749 Год назад +3

    I remember seeing haycocks and corn stooks on farms when I was very small.
    There was great excitement when the first combine harvester came to my grandfather's farm in Tasmania.
    I also have a photograph of my great grandfather on that same farm, driving 3 draught horses to harvest his fields of oats with a reaper and binder.
    Also one of my grandfather as a boy, on the great day when it was Mill Farm's turn for the steam engine and thresher to visit. Many workers and their dogs gathered to feed oat sheaves into it, and stitch the bulging sacks of grain closed.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +3

      Back then, harvesting was a community event, with everyone helping and celebrating afterwards. Nowadays usually there is no time for that anymore and everyone fights their own battle. Soon, there won;t be any drivers in the super modern machines anymore and they will be driven via GPS. That's what attracted so many to this event, it gave us all a chance to connect with the land, the season and the community we live in!

  • @jenhofmann
    @jenhofmann Год назад +4

    It's wonderful to be reminded where our food comes from and the people who make it possible. Thank you for this informative video!

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +1

      It's a lot of work when you start thinking about it!

  • @DianeD862
    @DianeD862 Год назад +3

    We will watch this on later we love watching.We watch a farmer as well in Ireland he’s called Farmer Phil he his in County Longford he’s so interesting a family farmer.We enjoy watching your farmer.Hope your getting better ❤️‍🩹.GodBless.

  • @rolfbrunner3016
    @rolfbrunner3016 Год назад

    Nice to watch.Greatinfs from a German,living in Indonesia

  • @lincolngrove2808
    @lincolngrove2808 Год назад +3

    What a gentle pleasure your blog is. Lovely, thank you.

  • @frederickmoller
    @frederickmoller Год назад +3

    Thanks for a lovely video that I learned about oats, which I never knew about before, and also the comradery involved to this special occasion!

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Amazing how much there is to oats, isn't it?

  • @theramblingnaturalist9601
    @theramblingnaturalist9601 Год назад +6

    What a lovely video, I have a small farmer opposite me, not huge farm, he uses an old New Holland with open cab, always seems to do the job. The other local farm [1200 + acres] has what they consider an "old" Claas - it's 8 years old and constantly breaking down!

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +5

      I think the more 'modern' machines get, the more parts there are to them and the more complexity in making them all work together in harmony!

  • @RB-wl7ct
    @RB-wl7ct Год назад +1

    I dont know how I missed this. What a lovely, lovely video. Thank you so much.

  • @vladabocanek3703
    @vladabocanek3703 Год назад +2

    Way out west can be a way way western :) Nice video and nice well spended time for all.

  • @irishjonny11
    @irishjonny11 Год назад +2

    Lovely video .. I love my trips down to Kilcrohane where the people are so friendly ♥️

  • @gannas42
    @gannas42 Год назад +1

    This made my morning. What a nice get together for a good cause. So lovely to see everyone out having a pleasant time together. Warms my heart. Thanks for sharing!

  • @jamesswanton9377
    @jamesswanton9377 Год назад

    Thanks Sandra for doing a fine job on the video, just to say that machine is 50 years old and had a very leisurely life with the previous owner.

  • @yeagerxp
    @yeagerxp Год назад +2

    Very Nice 👍👍👍Thank you for sharing . Take care of yourselves, be safe, and healthy 🇨🇦

  • @tomtruesdale6901
    @tomtruesdale6901 Год назад +3

    What a wonderful trip that must have been. Beautiful countryside there.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      It was a treat to be out on that day!

  • @assassinlexx1993
    @assassinlexx1993 Год назад

    Beautiful country you have. With your tiny fields. There must be a reason why you keep the fields tiny.

  • @gordanmilne7034
    @gordanmilne7034 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the craic.

  • @mischef18
    @mischef18 Год назад +1

    Really enjoyed this video so thanks so much for taking us along. They only do maise (corn) in my area so it's good to see something else being harvested. Safe travels

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      A field of maize looks pretty, too, but nothing beats a golden yellow field of oats I think!

  • @johncourtneidge
    @johncourtneidge Год назад +1

    Hurrah!
    What a peach of a plot of land!

  • @eckosters
    @eckosters Год назад +2

    First off: yes, I think you’d be an excellent audiobook reader!
    And I loved all of this but I am surprised the farmer owns the combine! Where I grew up, these kinds of super expensive machinery are purchased by a member-owned farm co-op.
    And for trivia: we had a little lunch cafe here until recently. It was called The Rolled Oat 😊

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +2

      Oh, I would have loved to visit that cafe, great name, and I love oats - porridge, oatmeal biscuits, oat bread...you name it! Nowadays these machines are collector's items really as the modern machines have taken over. They are owned by people who have the spare time to mind them. But yes, in the olden days they were shared between farms - especially when the stationary threshing machines were still used. They used to travel from farm to farm at harvest time, and everyone helped each other, it was called 'meitheal', the Irish word for coming together to support and help.

  • @geraldinewillis9293
    @geraldinewillis9293 Год назад +1

    Looks like great fun

  • @timeflysintheshop
    @timeflysintheshop Год назад

    That was a great video about a great event! Well done! It is fun to see an older piece of farm equipment put to good use. Here in Ohio, the combines are huge! We grow lots of corn, wheat, and soybeans here, as well as clover and hay.

  • @peterfarmer1592
    @peterfarmer1592 Год назад +1

    Loved that. Thankyou. 💕

    • @jamesswanton9377
      @jamesswanton9377 Год назад

      What a fine video myself on the combine and a fine crowd to support a very worthy cause the air ambulance

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Год назад +2

    Oats. A grain, which in England is generally given to horses, but in Scotland supports the people. - Samuel Johnson.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Oats are very popular here in Ireland. And I am not surprised, so tasty and nutritious! But sadly, on the downside, it's mostly soy and maize and sugar beet that goes to horses these days.

  • @H4rleyBoy
    @H4rleyBoy Год назад +1

    You don't say how many hours were spent chasing vermin out of the internals or how many hoses or belts were chewed on and replaced, but it's always great to see an old bit of kit out doing what it was built to do though.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +1

      I wasn;t there when they tried to get it going again, so no, I don't know! But it worked happily and smoothly all afternoon once it was in the field!

    • @jamesswanton9377
      @jamesswanton9377 Год назад

      Vermin aren't a problem if a few good cats around

    • @jamesswanton9377
      @jamesswanton9377 Год назад

      All first day belts on that machine 50.years old.

  • @FarmingTheFens
    @FarmingTheFens Год назад +1

    We use an open air 1530, always done us well

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Oh yes, there are many different versions, all very handy!

    • @jamesswanton9377
      @jamesswanton9377 Год назад

      The 1530 was the smaller version of the 1545 , the 1545 was away bigger machine

  • @DisVietVetUSA
    @DisVietVetUSA Год назад +1

    Great video and did Tim win the ratchet set by chance? In our home we sit dow to a pipping hot bowl of McCann's Irish Oatmeal with brown sugar, it is good for the heart ad want ails ya digesit wise. Me favorite is Irish Oatmeal Cookies as they are great with a hot cup of dripped coffee...... See ya round the next vidweo, be well and happy and say hello to Eor for me!

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +1

      Will do! And no, he didn't win. Still had a good day though.

  • @martialme84
    @martialme84 Год назад +1

    06:55 I'm with you on the appreciation of machinery while still being horse power obsessed.
    "Why not enjoy both?", i say.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Once in a while, watching machines is great, but watching horse power always goes! (Tim would not agree on this one, we are all different, aren't we?!)

  • @kameljoe21
    @kameljoe21 Год назад +1

    Sandra, i am guessing that oat harvest is very small in Ireland? If that is the case then I can see why its a sweet event. Where I live harvest like this a a busy time of the year. I have helped, harvest wheat, corn and other things. My neighbor Henry still have a really nice and in working condition threshing Machine which has aI think a hit and miss or a diesel engine like Tim has. He spent a lot of time working on it and fixing every old little flaw and updated it over the years and has a sweet paint job. Every few years he would pull it out and take a horse drawn sickle mower and an atv and cut some wheat and rake it and and pitch it on to a running gear and thrash it. Its a sight to see for sure.
    New Hollands are pretty nice machines. We have a massive amount of old 50s 60s models Gleaners combines that can be bought for real cheap in working order with good heads. I just do not have enough land to do it my self. i though have watched this channel called JunkYard Digs I think. They did a whole series about fixing up junk farm equipment and plant and harvest corn.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Would definitely be nice to have enough suitable land to get one of those machines in, or like you describe, have a sort of work day, with reaper binder, threshing machine etc. Farmers grew a lot of oats and barley here in the West of Ireland, but the fields are too small now for those big modern machines, and the climate not really suitable to get an economically viable and reliable harvest. But further up in the middle of the county and along the east coast, there is still a lot of grain grown. Have you heard of Flahavans? Big main producers of oats for human consumption here in Ireland. And a big part of our animal feed of oats and barley is grown here in Ireland. Alos barley for brewing. The climate in the midlands and on the east coast is very different from way out west!

    • @kameljoe21
      @kameljoe21 Год назад +1

      @@WayOutWestx2 Now I am wondering what kind of Flahavans I should get.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Flahavans Organic Porridge Oats are unbeatable, just had my breakfast portion, mmmh!

  • @bluelilly22222
    @bluelilly22222 Год назад +1

  • @calvingreene90
    @calvingreene90 Год назад +2

    A good excuse for a party.

  • @hassancharaq5775
    @hassancharaq5775 Год назад +1

    hello how are you and how is this new season is your new season in this year

  • @jasonmushersee
    @jasonmushersee Год назад +1

    a day of itchy

  • @The...0_0...
    @The...0_0... Год назад +1

    I wonder how long a field like that would take to manually harvest ... man or beast ?!💖💖💖

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      By hand with scythe? With a capable crew hopefully no longer than a day. With horsedrawn reaper binder probably a few hours?

  • @candiwallace6605
    @candiwallace6605 Год назад

    ❣❣❣

  • @rentregagnant
    @rentregagnant Год назад +1

    ...But I've got a brand-new combine harvester and I'll give you the key!

    • @FarmingTheFens
      @FarmingTheFens Год назад

      Come now let’s get together in perfec armony!

  • @ronjones9373
    @ronjones9373 Год назад +1

    Just how far is way, way, out west?

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад +4

      A looong way ;-) Last stop before America!

  • @ltsmash45
    @ltsmash45 Год назад +1

    :)

  • @kameljoe21
    @kameljoe21 Год назад +1

    I want a box of Coco Pops. America does not have it. I am thinking it would be cheaper to pay someone in Ireland to ship me an empty box to which I can put my cocoa Krispies in ( the same thing. ) If anyone wants to do that. Let me know.
    Amazon says...
    Kellogg's Coco Pops (800g)
    Brand: Kellogg's
    4.0 out of 5 stars 22 ratings
    -29%
    $19.99 ($0.71 / Ounce)
    Walmart says..
    Kellogg's Coco Pops Jumbos 220 G
    $162.39
    Out of stock
    What are Coco Pops called in America?
    Image result for kellogg coco pops american version
    Called Coco Pops in the UK and Ireland. The cereal was introduced in the United States in 1958. In 2003, the cereal was renamed "Cocoa Rice Krispies", as Kellogg's endeavored to unite their Rice Krispies variations under a single marketing schema. In 2006, the name was changed back to Cocoa Krispies.

    • @WayOutWestx2
      @WayOutWestx2  Год назад

      Ah poor you. No coco pops unless you are rich! Nearly 20 dollars from amazon is still hefty, gosh. Tempts me to start an export business ;-)