Bob Brown is probably my favorite person on earth that I’ve never met. He’s a great representative of all of the things and ideals that make America great.
Fantastic It took a while for me to circle around to listen to the podcast but very much worth it Thanks for opening up your life for our listening pleasure
This podcast is something you will always reflect back on later in life. Love bob he his great Sounds like he was a stern man to live with but brought years of knowledge Thanks again. From south Louisiana.
Thanks Brian. Brings back memories of my Dad in that era. Your Dad is an amazing individual. I so enjoy his determined attitude in every video you post. Not many left in this country like him.
Priceless. Bob and his working words. I grew up in the same time. Some experience were so close to mine. Great history. The great grandkids will love this. Better than pitchers. I never got this interaction from my grand parents
Maybe one of the coolest episodes yet. I love to hear stories told by the older generation. Can't wait to see The George tell his story too! 3,5 hours just flew by in a hurry..👍
Awesome, awesome, awesome. Brian this is something you can cherish forever. I wish I had such a tape of my dad and my grandpa like you now have of your dad. So much information they have to share, so many of us never take the time to retrieve it.
This history is fun to listen to. Brings back good memories. I remember when the articulated 4wd tractors were coming out. Everyone said you couldn't turn them around.
Growing up in the Frankfort, OH area I always heard stories about some of the tools your Dad built from scratch. Great stories of how he put them together and told in a real way. I actually had a random stranger I met in TN ask me if I knew you after finding out that we lived in Chillicothe a few years ago. You guys make Ross County proud!
That was great! Best insight into your history yet! Your dad has one good memory. Those stories are priceless. I'm glad you have that on tape for future generations and just to watch every now and then!❤️🚜
Your dad reminds me so much of my grandfather. Hes just so real and says it the way people really talk. He doesn't fall into the trap of acting political correct. Your videos are great. Thanks Brian and Bob from fellow ohio small farmer
I been waiting for this! I giggled when Bob had you guess on how big of a moldboard the Ferguson would pull. Brain you showed how times have changed when you said shank instead of bottom. I remember as a kid pulling a 6 bottom semi mount with a turned up 4440. We still use moldboards but they are 8 bottom onland switch plows.
I sat down with my Grandfather many times to talk about how he started farming and the stories of the equipment he liked and didn't like and it never got old. The podcast was long but very entertaining, thanks for sharing
That was absolutely awesome to watch on my 80"tv,loved listening about the old equipment and how farming has evolved in a short amount of time thanks Bob and Brian for sharing it,my wife even liked it!!
Love hearing these old stories. my grandad was born in 1912 and my dad in 1954. My grandad still plowed with mules in the 50s in northwest Kansas. Most of his crops went to feed his cows for his butcher shop.
Great video! Really enjoyed it! Wish others would do the same! I related to a lot of what Bob had to say, sorry I'll miss you all at Kentucky, I'll be there Friday, thanks for the video, Art!
We've still got my great grandpa's TO-30... with an Oliver torsion seat even. Still use it for raking hay and spraying fencelines. Always great to hear old stories
Thank you Bob and Brian I think this was the best video to date, I love all of yalls videos but to hear the family history is so important for today's generations to hear and see thank you again.
Bob thsnk you sincerely for doing this! Brought back so many memories of my dad who farmed his whole life. He passed 20 years ago and I so wish I had his stories recorded. This interview revived so many of those stories he shared and I, once again, can't say Thank You enogh.
My grandpa bought a walk behind tractor after WW2. Well my dad's had it for years just sitting around. So I went over last week and got the chisel plow so I can rebuild it. I was thinking it would be a pain to get those old bolts out that haven't been moved in at least 40 years. Surprisingly I had no issues with them it was the cotter pins breaking.
Brian your dad mentioned some old super 8 movies that he never had converted over. Please try and find all those and get them converted. That would make an awesome video . Last year I had all of our 80’ s and 90’s videos converted over to dvd. This past Christmas we all sat around with tears in our eyes watching them . What a memory . I really enjoyed this Brian . We are from Ohio so listening to your dad talk was a walk down memory lane . Thanks for this .
We had some reel to reel videos of the farm and family get together from 75 to 80 put on dvd. Awesome memories for our family to have and us growing up onscreen!
Interesting to hear your dad talk about the old corn pickers. My grandpa lost his leg from the calf down in a plugged up picker in 1959. We lost him in 2019. Hell of a guy.
Brian, absolutely love this! Only 40 minutes in and will have to come back later! Bob, I was born in 62 and we had a 77 olie and dad had a mounted picker for it 2. 1st tractor i drove was a 770 gas. Bringing back memories!
This is greatness. My son loves tractors and when he gets older this will be a history lesson taught out of school by your Pops for sure. Very nice work Brian and thank you for the content Sir.
Fantastic Video Brian and Bob! I love hearing old timers talk about the past. The dairy farm I help out on runs alot of older IH equipment. I will have to check out your other podcasts. Thank you for including this on RUclips!
What a great video. Your dad is book of knowledge. Hard working and thinks outside the box to fix or invent a solution. He is very successful and modest. He loves what he is doing and wants to leave a legacy to his two boys which is very admirable . Your a fortunate son to have a mentor like that and who is calm cool and collect
This was fantastic best video you have made Brian. You learn so much by listening and talking to parent’s grandparents.these tales are your history.everybody should make time and sit and talk to parents and grandparents ask questions and you will learn a lot and your family history will not be lost.I didn’t do what I said so much me and dad talk about his past and family fairly regularly and I learn something new most times but he has said what I’ve said here today.once the older folk have past then it’s gone.talk to your family and learn your history to pass down the new line.well done brilliant to the Browns
Great podcast Brian! Your dad has a great memory. I truly enjoyed listening to your farms history. God bless you and your family. Hope you guys have a great planting season
congratulations men, lots of hard work and great memories. give yuorselves a big pat on the back. thankyou for the great experience. will always watch yor videos!!!!
I need to do something like this with my dad too. Thank you. Great to hear these stories. We still have one of the original engine powered Allis Chalmers 66 my great grandpa bought brand new. Still runs and works like it should. Takes up way too much room in the barn. Lol. Our farm was paid for with clover seed. Grandpa talked about the seed buyer coming in a air plane and landing north of the bank barn on one of the few flat spots on our 80 acres. He'd stay here at the farm a few days and fly to the next farm. A few days later trucks would show up and haul out all the bags of clover seed. 🤷. What a different time!! 🙂
Thoroughly enjoyable. Brian, your comments on how college didn’t relate to real life is unfortunately true in most professions. The MBAs we hired through the years were the worst hires. They didn’t know their academic credentials made them hard to train. We had better luck with kids with community college degrees that farmed, or trades, or family businesses that knew what a hard days work was.
That's one thing I love about U tube, I have seen and talked with folks from all over the world, Imagine a little guy from Ma. talking farming with dudes from England, Ireland, Australia, Austria... I never would have.
Love listening to the older generation talking about the old days. I was born in 68 and I started helping my grandparents dairy farm 5-6 years old feeding the cows while they were getting milked. Then at 6 yrs old started driving tractor for bailing hay. I thought I was the coolest kid.
Very cool to hear these stories! All of the steps that it took to build the impressive operation you have now. It doesn’t happen overnight. My dad is the same age as Bob and has a lot of similar stories from the early days when he started farming.
Awesome video Bob and Brian. I am 2 years younger than your dad Brian. As he was talking about all the old stuff I was remembering my life. Milking cow's at 7 or 8, driving the tractor on my dad's custom baling operation in the 60's. Running a pull type combine first and then a self propelled one later on during my upper grade school days. Many wonderful memories and times that today's children can't and wouldn't participate in. I worked with my Dad for over 40 years and really miss it and him. He's been gone since April of 1994.
I enjoyed the car comments and history of them the most. The whole segment was very interesting and could remember a lot of what was said myself being 5 years younger than Bob.
Such a beautiful set of stories. So many memories rekindled by this. We in Central Mississippi were probably a decade or more behind with respect to the ear corn to shelled corn transition. I pulled ear corn through the 70s. As the youngest it fell to me to throw it into the crib upper reaches. Lotsa snot was produced. Love listening to this.
Geat video Brian. You have an amazing father. Hi primary theme that keeps coming thru is he is a man of convictions, and does what he says he will do, right or wrong, good or bad, if he says it will happen, it will. You should be proud he is your father.
Very neat to hear, lost my dad in 14 at 56, always missed the stories, can still hear them from my uncle, but not the same. Always love the farm stories, would loved to had my dad do this or my grandma so many memories.
Robert is awesome. The great thing about farming is surviving all the stupid things we do. Brian, cherish these days working with your dad. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t miss mine.
Great stuff Brian always love when dad gives us running commentary in the videos he’s a legend 👍 when Henry & Harry got together the Ford/Ferguson was created from a handshake the rest is history🙋♂️
Brian this is the best video I have watch ever your dad very interesting I wish I knew what he has forgotten great video keep them coming long or short I watch them all Take care of your dad great man
I still have my grandpa's original '52 TO30 tractor. I plowed many acres in the early 70's with a 2 bottom plow behind it, raked hundreds of acres of hay and pulled many, many loads of hay and cob corn with it.
Wow..listening your Dad talk brought back memories working on the farm with my Dad. I'm only four years younger that your dad. We had much of the same equipment. Plus we had sugar beets and tomatoes.
Bob Brown is probably my favorite person on earth that I’ve never met. He’s a great representative of all of the things and ideals that make America great.
Fantastic
It took a while for me to circle around to listen to the podcast but very much worth it
Thanks for opening up your life for our listening pleasure
I love these stories of our parents and grandparents! Toughest people ever!!
This podcast is something you will always reflect back on later in life. Love bob he his great Sounds like he was a stern man to live with but brought years of knowledge Thanks again. From south Louisiana.
Not usually into 3 hours
But I could listen to another
3 hours of your dad's stories.
THIS WAS GREAT 👍👍👍
Same here probably one of the best podcasts I have heard
Thanks Brian. Brings back memories of my Dad in that era. Your Dad is an amazing individual. I so enjoy his determined attitude in every video you post. Not many left in this country like him.
That was by far and away the best video this year!!!!!!!! Bob Brown is the Silver Legend!!
Priceless. Bob and his working words. I grew up in the same time. Some experience were so close to mine. Great history. The great grandkids will love this. Better than pitchers. I never got this interaction from my grand parents
What an awesome way to keep these stories alive. One day when your dad is gone you'll have these stories to show your grandkids. Thanks Brian and Bob.
Pply
↩️r
Brian I’m listening to this and I don’t want it to end!
"Those washers didn't hold" was golden ! Enjoyed hearing your dads journey through the years . 62 yr old farmer from Indiana
Cherish these stories they are priceless
Maybe one of the coolest episodes yet. I love to hear stories told by the older generation. Can't wait to see The George tell his story too! 3,5 hours just flew by in a hurry..👍
Awesome, awesome, awesome. Brian this is something you can cherish forever. I wish I had such a tape of my dad and my grandpa like you now have of your dad. So much information they have to share, so many of us never take the time to retrieve it.
Listening to your Dad's stories brings back alot of memories.
This history is fun to listen to. Brings back good memories. I remember when the articulated 4wd tractors were coming out. Everyone said you couldn't turn them around.
I sure enjoyed watching this on a rainy day in Alabama. Your dad is certainly enjoyable to listen too.
Growing up in the Frankfort, OH area I always heard stories about some of the tools your Dad built from scratch. Great stories of how he put them together and told in a real way. I actually had a random stranger I met in TN ask me if I knew you after finding out that we lived in Chillicothe a few years ago. You guys make Ross County proud!
I truly appreciate you making this video. These kinds of stories are being lost everyday. Not just with farming but with everything.
That was great! Best insight into your history yet! Your dad has one good memory. Those stories are priceless. I'm glad you have that on tape for future generations and just to watch every now and then!❤️🚜
Your dad reminds me so much of my grandfather. Hes just so real and says it the way people really talk. He doesn't fall into the trap of acting political correct. Your videos are great. Thanks Brian and Bob from fellow ohio small farmer
I been waiting for this! I giggled when Bob had you guess on how big of a moldboard the Ferguson would pull. Brain you showed how times have changed when you said shank instead of bottom. I remember as a kid pulling a 6 bottom semi mount with a turned up 4440. We still use moldboards but they are 8 bottom onland switch plows.
I have enjoyed watching along for years. This video ranks my favorite. Thanks for sharing.
I watched it all. Not all at once but I really enjoy listening to your Dad. Thanks for putting it on your channel. Take care
everything your Dad said is true in the 50's & 60's is true. I remember mounting the two picker on the Oliver 77 tractor.
Of all the great videos you share this on was one of my absolute favorites bob and Monroe are as fun and interesting as thy come thank you Brian
I sat down with my Grandfather many times to talk about how he started farming and the stories of the equipment he liked and didn't like and it never got old. The podcast was long but very entertaining, thanks for sharing
That was absolutely awesome to watch on my 80"tv,loved listening about the old equipment and how farming has evolved in a short amount of time thanks Bob and Brian for sharing it,my wife even liked it!!
I have seen this video, numerous times now, and Bob Brown becomes more and more fascinating each time. He's a heck of a guy.
Amazing episode…. Just so impressed with your father !
Thanks Bob for taking the time to do this !
Love hearing these old stories. my grandad was born in 1912 and my dad in 1954. My grandad still plowed with mules in the 50s in northwest Kansas. Most of his crops went to feed his cows for his butcher shop.
Great video! Really enjoyed it! Wish others would do the same! I related to a lot of what Bob had to say, sorry I'll miss you all at Kentucky, I'll be there Friday, thanks for the video, Art!
We've still got my great grandpa's TO-30... with an Oliver torsion seat even. Still use it for raking hay and spraying fencelines. Always great to hear old stories
Awesome to see you Bob sitting down talking about your experience well farming.
Enjoyed this one a lot.
Thank you Bob and Brian I think this was the best video to date, I love all of yalls videos but to hear the family history is so important for today's generations to hear and see thank you again.
Really enjoyed this! Reminds me listening to Dad, uncles and neighbors
What a great video. Thanks for the work you put into this. This is truly a tribute to Bob and his character.
Bob thsnk you sincerely for doing this! Brought back so many memories of my dad who farmed his whole life. He passed 20 years ago and I so wish I had his stories recorded. This interview revived so many of those stories he shared and I, once again, can't say Thank You enogh.
My grandpa bought a walk behind tractor after WW2. Well my dad's had it for years just sitting around. So I went over last week and got the chisel plow so I can rebuild it. I was thinking it would be a pain to get those old bolts out that haven't been moved in at least 40 years. Surprisingly I had no issues with them it was the cotter pins breaking.
Thanks for doing this could listen to him tell stories all the time and ❤
Brian your dad mentioned some old super 8 movies that he never had converted over. Please try and find all those and get them converted. That would make an awesome video . Last year I had all of our 80’ s and 90’s videos converted over to dvd. This past Christmas we all sat around with tears in our eyes watching them . What a memory . I really enjoyed this Brian . We are from Ohio so listening to your dad talk was a walk down memory lane . Thanks for this .
Brian PLEASE get these converted!
We had some reel to reel videos of the farm and family get together from 75 to 80 put on dvd. Awesome memories for our family to have and us growing up onscreen!
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Interesting to hear your dad talk about the old corn pickers. My grandpa lost his leg from the calf down in a plugged up picker in 1959. We lost him in 2019. Hell of a guy.
Brian, absolutely love this! Only 40 minutes in and will have to come back later! Bob, I was born in 62 and we had a 77 olie and dad had a mounted picker for it 2. 1st tractor i drove was a 770 gas. Bringing back memories!
Man I enjoyed this so much Bob we don’t get to see each other enough good job Brian
It’s like I’m sitting down and talking about the old days that dad experienced with dad.
This video was just awesome love listening to the old stories from bob.
I truly enjoy your dad Brian. Mr Bob is a treasure. God bless
This is greatness. My son loves tractors and when he gets older this will be a history lesson taught out of school by your Pops for sure. Very nice work Brian and thank you for the content Sir.
Great job out there guys. Y’all stay safe out there, ya hear! Thanks for sharing!!
Thoroughly enjoyed watching this. Takes me back to when my dad and me farmed together.
Fantastic Video Brian and Bob! I love hearing old timers talk about the past. The dairy farm I help out on runs alot of older IH equipment. I will have to check out your other podcasts. Thank you for including this on RUclips!
What a great video. Your dad is book of knowledge. Hard working and thinks outside the box to fix or invent a solution. He is very successful and modest. He loves what he is doing and wants to leave a legacy to his two boys which is very admirable . Your a fortunate son to have a mentor like that and who is calm cool and collect
This was fantastic best video you have made Brian. You learn so much by listening and talking to parent’s grandparents.these tales are your history.everybody should make time and sit and talk to parents and grandparents ask questions and you will learn a lot and your family history will not be lost.I didn’t do what I said so much me and dad talk about his past and family fairly regularly and I learn something new most times but he has said what I’ve said here today.once the older folk have past then it’s gone.talk to your family and learn your history to pass down the new line.well done brilliant to the Browns
Awesome stories! Miss my 2 Grandpas telling those. Thanks for sharing.
Great podcast. Our history in agriculture needs to be shared with our new generations so it not forgot! Hope your dad can get his 4430 back.
That was awesome, Bob is cool and a successful hard working man!
Great podcast Brian! Your dad has a great memory. I truly enjoyed listening to your farms history. God bless you and your family. Hope you guys have a great planting season
Thanks Gentlemen.... Much appreciate your time and thoughts Bob.... keep up the great works......
looking forward to more Bob cam this year!!!!
congratulations men, lots of hard work and great memories. give yuorselves a big pat on the back. thankyou for the great experience. will always watch yor videos!!!!
Bob is a wealth of knowledge. You should film everything thing that he can remember so that your kids will have a true treasure of their grandpa.
I need to do something like this with my dad too. Thank you. Great to hear these stories. We still have one of the original engine powered Allis Chalmers 66 my great grandpa bought brand new. Still runs and works like it should. Takes up way too much room in the barn. Lol. Our farm was paid for with clover seed. Grandpa talked about the seed buyer coming in a air plane and landing north of the bank barn on one of the few flat spots on our 80 acres. He'd stay here at the farm a few days and fly to the next farm. A few days later trucks would show up and haul out all the bags of clover seed. 🤷. What a different time!! 🙂
Thoroughly enjoyable. Brian, your comments on how college didn’t relate to real life is unfortunately true in most professions. The MBAs we hired through the years were the worst hires. They didn’t know their academic credentials made them hard to train. We had better luck with kids with community college degrees that farmed, or trades, or family businesses that knew what a hard days work was.
That's one thing I love about U tube, I have seen and talked with folks from all over the world, Imagine a little guy from Ma. talking farming with dudes from England, Ireland, Australia, Austria... I never would have.
Love listening to the older generation talking about the old days. I was born in 68 and I started helping my grandparents dairy farm 5-6 years old feeding the cows while they were getting milked. Then at 6 yrs old started driving tractor for bailing hay. I thought I was the coolest kid.
I am one month in and still trying to find time to finish this one. Love it. Thanks. I watch a few minutes when I can then come back when I got time.
Thanks for watching
Very cool to hear these stories! All of the steps that it took to build the impressive operation you have now. It doesn’t happen overnight. My dad is the same age as Bob and has a lot of similar stories from the early days when he started farming.
It took me all day but I got it watched fully. Loved every minute. Another good one men
Conversations like this “Soak them up”❤
I wish every farm RUclips channel would do this, great video I watched every minute!
Love the stories from Bob!! golden!!!!!!!!! gr from the Netherlands!!
Best video yet what a legend you all should have someone write a book about that man
Love it. When my Granpa was alive heard lots of threshing stories.
Awesome video Bob and Brian. I am 2 years younger than your dad Brian. As he was talking about all the old stuff I was remembering my life. Milking cow's at 7 or 8, driving the tractor on my dad's custom baling operation in the 60's. Running a pull type combine first and then a self propelled one later on during my upper grade school days. Many wonderful memories and times that today's children can't and wouldn't participate in. I worked with my Dad for over 40 years and really miss it and him. He's been gone since April of 1994.
Enjoyed this video and talking about old times. I remember many times just like yours.
Brain this has to be one of your best videos that you have put out so far … I really enjoyed it and thanks for sharing !!!
Excellent story about the history of the farm. I love listening to farm stories about the old days.
What a truly spectacular show guys. Very interesting to listen to the stories. Thank you very much for sharing and hope to hear more Bob stories
Father Brown is awesome...love the stories. My dad passed thanks for sharing yours 😊
Brian I love your videos and coming up for broadcast. Loved it.
What a great story time......thanks Bob and Brian.
I enjoyed the car comments and history of them the most. The whole segment was very interesting and could remember a lot of what was said myself being 5 years younger than Bob.
I acquired my grandfather’s T O 30 in 1974 I was 16 worked all summer to earn enough to rebuild the engine Thanks for the memories
Such a beautiful set of stories. So many memories rekindled by this. We in Central Mississippi were probably a decade or more behind with respect to the ear corn to shelled corn transition. I pulled ear corn through the 70s. As the youngest it fell to me to throw it into the crib upper reaches. Lotsa snot was produced. Love listening to this.
Geat video Brian. You have an amazing father. Hi primary theme that keeps coming thru is he is a man of convictions, and does what he says he will do, right or wrong, good or bad, if he says it will happen, it will. You should be proud he is your father.
PS,, there are no commercials on this video which makes it much easier to watch. Thanks
Great video guys. Loved to learn about your family. You have one of the best channels out there. Just awesome.
What a great video! Can relate to so much of the material you and your dad covered. Keep your videos coming.
Very neat to hear, lost my dad in 14 at 56, always missed the stories, can still hear them from my uncle, but not the same. Always love the farm stories, would loved to had my dad do this or my grandma so many memories.
Robert is awesome. The great thing about farming is surviving all the stupid things we do. Brian, cherish these days working with your dad. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t miss mine.
Best 3 and half hours entertainment in a VERY long time. Wonderful, thank you all for you time. Would be good to chat with George.
Great stuff Brian always love when dad gives us running commentary in the videos he’s a legend 👍 when Henry & Harry got together the Ford/Ferguson was created from a handshake the rest is history🙋♂️
G'day from Australia 🇦🇺 I enjoyed the video I think your dad enjoyed yarning about the old ways too.
Brian this is the best video I have watch ever your dad very interesting I wish I knew what he has forgotten great video keep them coming long or short I watch them all Take care of your dad great man
Great job, Awesome, inspiring & enjoyable video, reminds me of my own family and hats off to the Brown Family for sharing their story!
A+. I really enjoyed the conversation with your dad.
Watched every minute of this vid. Your friend is right, you’re living the dream. Would be fun to have a beer or two with you and your dad.
I listened via Workin Words. It’s great to have a recorded autobiographical history. Very special. Thanks for sharing.
That was a great video. I enjoyed listening to all the stories. Thank you
I'm glad to hear about your Basketball stadium in the barn. We still have a hoop in the old dairy barn loft. My uncle used to tell stories too.
I still have my grandpa's original '52 TO30 tractor. I plowed many acres in the early 70's with a 2 bottom plow behind it, raked hundreds of acres of hay and pulled many, many loads of hay and cob corn with it.
This was great Brian, I love hearing the old timers stories. You should do these more often
Wow..listening your Dad talk brought back memories working on the farm with my Dad. I'm only four years younger that your dad. We had much of the same equipment. Plus we had sugar beets and tomatoes.