Watching a Boehm farm video is like stepping in a time machine and being transported to the 1970’s. Working with my grandad and uncle in the days before our 500K combines, auto steer, and hydraulic downforce. We are a 100 times more efficient now, but I still miss the clatter of chains sometimes. Great video thanks!
My friend in central Wis. had a small family dairy farm, this is the same picker and tractor he used till he retired about 15 yrs ago. I had a Oliver mounted picker on an early Oliver HP 70 tractor. Did a great job, wish now I had kept it, went to a corn head on a Gleaner combine. really enjoy your older , practical equipment.
I know a guy who lost half his hand in the husking bed of a 300 picker looks like the camera was luckier than he was. That was some impressive footage though
Always good content.....and no begging for subscribers, likes, comments or patreon money. No clickbait, advertising for sponsors or trying to sell merchandise, just good old farming with realistic equipment. Stay humble, my friend.
For picking corn we used to add "bang boards" side extensions on the wagons (sides and back). Ear corn is much lighter so you can pile more on the wagon.
I think "bang board" was a term carried over from picking by hand in that case one side was much taller, so the guys would not throw the ears past the wagon.
Looks like you getting a pretty decent yield.....the picker is doing a pretty good job, very little butt shelling and good husking job. Have a great year!!
When I was young we didn’t have overlap with headlands, not due to GPS controlled planter units, but being taken care of by corn cultivating at least 2 times and often 3 times. Most people hated cultivating corn but I enjoyed it.
Hey, thanks for the really up close views of your corn picker, we got to see how everything works now. 👍😁 Glad the cam survived to live for another day... ✔✔
That's the point, the more that's done out front, the faster I can pick because I'm not relying on the husking bed so much. The sloped deck plates I put on help with more head husking.
@@boehmfarm4276 I guess it just never occurred to me that it worked that way. I just assumed the ears got rushed through there too fast. I guess my question is, did your modification make it husk more, or did your modification allow husking in the head? Do they husk in the head without the modification? We usually used a combine, but we did have a 2 row pull behind unit. I don't remember the brand. I seem remember it being green(non John Deere AFAIK) and silver (galvanized) and we had two beds for it, one did ears and one shelled. When I saw the husking bed, my brain just assumed it was only done there. I didn't think of it as a secondary husking area. (edit) I figured I might find a video of the kind we used to have. It had to be a "New Idea" one. Also, since you pointed out to me kinda how the head works, I really focused on paying attention to that in other videos. I think I answered my own question. It seems all the pickers I was looking at worked that way to some degree or other. Although, with your mods, it seems like 80-90% is done in the head.
@@bigv6724 Another fun movie with the same topic but more light hearted is that old movie "Deal of the Century" with Chevy Chase, if you haven't seen it.
WOW that's a ride you wouldn't want to take... cool as h3ll I gotta say, and your camera survived! It'd be interesting to do with a couple of those cheap microcams, taped back to back, so if one's face down the other is face up... or a keyfob cam with the lens on the end... maybe tape it to a penlight that's turned on or something so it has it's own light source... maybe two of them taped to a penlight one facing each direction so it's got a better chance of filming something without a lens being blocked... that would be cool LOL:) At least you didn't lose the camera in the wagon and we'd have to wait in the crib til next year LOL:) Watched some channel a fellow plowed under his gopro and didn't find it til like the next day or next week LOL:) Later! OL J R :)
I remember Dad picking corn in 1960 with a 60 John Deere pulling a David Brown one row picker and a Sears 4 wheel trailer. That's pretty good looking corn you have there.
@@boehmfarm4276 From what i remember they did not last long in production. Farmall, John Deere and new idea were most popular back then. If I remember correctly David Brown was from England and they were trying to get into the US market.
You want to see something really cool and interesting, and funny as heck, go down to the bottom of the screen, click on the "gear" icon and go up the menu to "playback speed" click on it and then click on .25... then watch it in 1/4 speed slo-motion... Just be advised turn your sound down or mute it because it stretches the audio of course as well, so most of the sound of the machine is electronic noise. The look on Jacob's face and what he said in slo mo is hilarious though... be sure to watch the second time it went through the whole machine-- it did capture a few shots from deep in the belly of the beast as it was going through the feeder chains and onto the husking bed as well as the trip through the elevator... You can really see so much more of how the machine is working when you slow it down... Later! OL J R :)
Lol I enjoy Nick and your's relationship it's pretty hilarious especially how different you two guys are plus we all have to have that one guy like Nick on the farm to be able to take our fustrations on right? They definitely may now be the brightest guy in the county but that will work good and treat you like a brother just make sure to always have enough dip around for them
Nice looking ears of corn going in the wagon. 👍🏻 Well, now I know the process a ear of corn goes thru with an ear picker. 😆😅👍🏻👍🏻 Glad the camera survives to make another video.
JD huskers claims up to 5mph. I probably go 3-4 in standing corn and feel like I'm overwhelming the husking bed. That corn head can get the ears off in a hurry.
@@boehmfarm4276 Interesting, I thought that the husking bed would be the limitation. I guess that is essentially the same header as they used on the 3300, and 4400 combine. I have seen them go very fast. My neighbor had that picker in 1973 or so when I was growing up.
You can shell it off the cob with a sheller, but it defeats the point basically unless you NEED shelled corn. ALL corn used to be harvested this way back in the old days, before combines started becoming popular back in the late 50's/early 60's, and even then a lot of guys stuck with picking corn for a long time after that. Ear corn can be picked WET to get it out of the field and then allowed to dry NATURALLY in a corn crib-- no dryer or massive supply of propane and a bin with a drying floor or batch flow or continuous flow grain dryer needed... Saves a TON of money over drying shelled corn at similar moisture levels! BUT "the market" (meaning elevators) are all pretty much set up for handling shelled corn, and that's what they want, and since nearly everybody has switched to combines, unless they're "selling it locally" like Jacob is doing, there's little point to it. I guess a guy could make the argument to pick and crib dry it over the winter then shell it and sell it in the winter/spring, and spread the cobs and shucks back on the field, but at that point it's probably simpler to just combine it and dry in the bin, a batch dryer, or continuous flow dryer, and pay for the propane to dry it. Most of what he's picking here is sold to hunters for deer corn, used to bait areas they're hunting in. The ear corn holds up better dumped in the woods than shelled corn would. Some of it he HAS sold to cattle feeders in the past, in which case they grind the whole ear corn cobs and all and the cattle will eat it that way. Better for them cob and all versus straight shelled corn. OR, just leave the corn in the field until the moisture gets down low enough to minimize drying costs and just accept that you'll have some yield losses to critters and down corn before it gets combined... Later! OL J R :)
Thanks for all ur creative camera work
Watching a Boehm farm video is like stepping in a time machine and being transported to the 1970’s. Working with my grandad and uncle in the days before our 500K combines, auto steer, and hydraulic downforce. We are a 100 times more efficient now, but I still miss the clatter of chains sometimes. Great video thanks!
My grandfather ran the same two row picker behind a 986 until 2006. This video is like looking into a memory.
My friend in central Wis. had a small family dairy farm, this is the same picker and tractor he used till he retired about 15 yrs ago. I had a Oliver mounted picker on an early Oliver HP 70 tractor. Did a great job, wish now I had kept it, went to a corn head on a Gleaner combine. really enjoy your older , practical equipment.
Well, it was nice to see a POV from the corns standpoint
Rest in Peace camera
Corn Simulator 20.... 10/10 would recommend
Honestly love that picker , love these videos the most ,
I know a guy who lost half his hand in the husking bed of a 300 picker looks like the camera was luckier than he was. That was some impressive footage though
Literally someone I work with lost their finger in the housing bed yesterday on the same machine. lucky that's all he lost
The cam chased by the vorn Picker 😂. interesting how it works with such a machine . Greeting from Germany 😊
Always good content.....and no begging for subscribers, likes, comments or patreon money.
No clickbait, advertising for sponsors or trying to sell merchandise, just good old farming with realistic equipment.
Stay humble, my friend.
I figure if viewers like it, they'll stick around.
@@boehmfarm4276 Yep, put out a good product and people will watch.
Excellent camera work and shot selection! Enjoyed those views a farmer never gets to see. Nick, North West Farmer
Thanks, I'm glad you like it.
For picking corn we used to add "bang boards" side extensions on the wagons (sides and back). Ear corn is much lighter so you can pile more on the wagon.
I think "bang board" was a term carried over from picking by hand in that case one side was much taller, so the guys would not throw the ears past the wagon.
Going along very nicely.with bonus footage thru cron picker.awsum
What a great picker. Thanks
You send that to John Deere and tell them how good a machine they made.
Thanks for the in depth coverage of the picker.
Looks like you getting a pretty decent yield.....the picker is doing a pretty good job, very little butt shelling and good husking job. Have a great year!!
Thank you.
damn you get dangerous with the camera placement
Tractor seat views are boring.
When I was young we didn’t have overlap with headlands, not due to GPS controlled planter units, but being taken care of by corn cultivating at least 2 times and often 3 times. Most people hated cultivating corn but I enjoyed it.
Hey, thanks for the really up close views of your corn picker, we got to see how everything works now. 👍😁 Glad the cam survived to live for another day... ✔✔
The best investment was buying that Deere corn picker . Yes it costed lots but have to look at the long run plus how fast it does pick corn
Next thing I'm getting is a solid uni with RWA to swim through the mud.
Even though it was accidental that video was is downright amazing.
Thank you
I never noticed before that the head does most of the husking.
That's the point, the more that's done out front, the faster I can pick because I'm not relying on the husking bed so much. The sloped deck plates I put on help with more head husking.
@@boehmfarm4276 I guess it just never occurred to me that it worked that way. I just assumed the ears got rushed through there too fast.
I guess my question is, did your modification make it husk more, or did your modification allow husking in the head? Do they husk in the head without the modification?
We usually used a combine, but we did have a 2 row pull behind unit. I don't remember the brand. I seem remember it being green(non John Deere AFAIK) and silver (galvanized) and we had two beds for it, one did ears and one shelled. When I saw the husking bed, my brain just assumed it was only done there. I didn't think of it as a secondary husking area.
(edit) I figured I might find a video of the kind we used to have. It had to be a "New Idea" one.
Also, since you pointed out to me kinda how the head works, I really focused on paying attention to that in other videos. I think I answered my own question. It seems all the pickers I was looking at worked that way to some degree or other.
Although, with your mods, it seems like 80-90% is done in the head.
Have to admit the end reminded me the beginning of Lord of War when the bullet shell being made.
Great movie.
@@l337pwnage underestimated movie for sure.
@@bigv6724 Another fun movie with the same topic but more light hearted is that old movie "Deal of the Century" with Chevy Chase, if you haven't seen it.
I don't know why 2020 youtube became the year of farming, but I'm here for it. This is awesome
Thanks for watching!
WOW that's a ride you wouldn't want to take... cool as h3ll I gotta say, and your camera survived! It'd be interesting to do with a couple of those cheap microcams, taped back to back, so if one's face down the other is face up... or a keyfob cam with the lens on the end... maybe tape it to a penlight that's turned on or something so it has it's own light source... maybe two of them taped to a penlight one facing each direction so it's got a better chance of filming something without a lens being blocked... that would be cool LOL:) At least you didn't lose the camera in the wagon and we'd have to wait in the crib til next year LOL:) Watched some channel a fellow plowed under his gopro and didn't find it til like the next day or next week LOL:) Later! OL J R :)
Well no one can say you didn’t show them exactly how corn picker works. Very nice
This video needs more views! That was hilarious!
Thank you
Skip to 9:50 if you want the camera fall.
Code brown on isle 2. I need a clean pair of shorts, a shovel, and a garden hose.
The last shot before we went thru the picker was amazing! Absolutely loved the view between rows.
Good job young man...never seen anybody else get those different position shots like that....awesome footage !
The part where it's riding up and out with the corn was the best. The thought of an expensive camera being eaten by a corn picker.
The camera ride was fun lol! My son asked me where we were going 😂
Is that brand of picker still made? They could use the footage to show just how good their pickers are if they were still in business! :D
These haven't been made for 30+ years.
lol the ending was awesome glad it survived!!!!
Wesley you’ll have to try this with krone!
If he does he will use his beloved gopro 😂
It did better than the one that went through the Walkers combine haha
I remember Dad picking corn in 1960 with a 60 John Deere pulling a David Brown one row picker and a Sears 4 wheel trailer. That's pretty good looking corn you have there.
Thank you. Never new there was a david brown picker.
@@boehmfarm4276 From what i remember they did not last long in production. Farmall, John Deere and new idea were most popular back then. If I remember correctly David Brown was from England and they were trying to get into the US market.
Well that sure is an interesting perspective for the camera
always wanted to get a jd 300 and build a custom 4row 20inch head for it. then grow some heritage corn variety's
My goal is to try 20" corn. The jd heads are easy to respace.
That is one view that a lot of people never get to see.
And if you do it's usually the last thing you ever see... OL J R :)
Man, go and buy a lottery ticket, that cameras got more lives than a cat.
That is a plan. Then I could make my million farming by starting with 2 million. lol
+Steve well, I'd be more impressed if it made it through a sheller. ;p still great footage, tho.
Those headlands are where an IH picker really helps with the elevator clutch!
Yeah, this has an electric clutch, but I don't have a switch wired in.
You want to see something really cool and interesting, and funny as heck, go down to the bottom of the screen, click on the "gear" icon and go up the menu to "playback speed" click on it and then click on .25... then watch it in 1/4 speed slo-motion... Just be advised turn your sound down or mute it because it stretches the audio of course as well, so most of the sound of the machine is electronic noise. The look on Jacob's face and what he said in slo mo is hilarious though... be sure to watch the second time it went through the whole machine-- it did capture a few shots from deep in the belly of the beast as it was going through the feeder chains and onto the husking bed as well as the trip through the elevator...
You can really see so much more of how the machine is working when you slow it down... Later! OL J R :)
Sell that footage to the camera company. It would make a good comercial.
Haha they'd give me $10 for an ad that plays during the super bowl 😅
@@boehmfarm4276 nah, that would have to be worth at least $15.
Lol I enjoy Nick and your's relationship it's pretty hilarious especially how different you two guys are plus we all have to have that one guy like Nick on the farm to be able to take our fustrations on right? They definitely may now be the brightest guy in the county but that will work good and treat you like a brother just make sure to always have enough dip around for them
Exactly
That was an awesome ending
Thank you
Nice looking ears of corn going in the wagon. 👍🏻 Well, now I know the process a ear of corn goes thru with an ear picker. 😆😅👍🏻👍🏻 Glad the camera survives to make another video.
What we're all after, nice clean loads of corn. Love the ending!!
Looked like it was going up an escalator, needed some good mall music to go with it.
Thanks for the inside view
POV: You're some corn
POV ur a corn
My buddy has the same picker. He raises white face herefords
Up next, what it's like to go through the feed grinder!
Hahaha
What do you guys do with ear corn? Don't see many people picking like this is anymore
I sell to deer Hunters.
That machine does a good job of takin the husks off. Used to pick in the ear long ago!! Had a Minneapolis moline then!!
Jacob your camara work augers well for you !!🤪👍
buena makina amigo yo tengo una igual saludos....
Omg ahahahaa that was a good one! Btw what kinda of camera do you use? I need that one lol
I use a GoPro hero 7 black.
Those new husking rolls were doing a great job. Fortunately the camera didn't have any husks attached or it would have been crushed!
POV:
*YOU ARE CORN*
and the GOPRO still works
It's hard to show the camera itself. It does have a scratch or two.
We did not get corn in to wet
How may miles per hour can you pick? That has to be the last John Deere picker made with a more modern header.
JD huskers claims up to 5mph. I probably go 3-4 in standing corn and feel like I'm overwhelming the husking bed. That corn head can get the ears off in a hurry.
@@boehmfarm4276 Interesting, I thought that the husking bed would be the limitation. I guess that is essentially the same header as they used on the 3300, and 4400 combine. I have seen them go very fast. My neighbor had that picker in 1973 or so when I was growing up.
You are getting to inventive with the camera position, what a ride LOL.
Vintage farming at its best!!!! Love the vids I'm a farmer myself in south Dakota and I love to see people still using equipment from days past
I don't watch any of the new machines.
Keep Doin' it. Hope your yields were good.
They are great.
What is the next step. Is there a machine that removes corn from cob? What is advantage to harvesting this way
The advantage is price. I am selling it on the cob.
You can shell it off the cob with a sheller, but it defeats the point basically unless you NEED shelled corn. ALL corn used to be harvested this way back in the old days, before combines started becoming popular back in the late 50's/early 60's, and even then a lot of guys stuck with picking corn for a long time after that. Ear corn can be picked WET to get it out of the field and then allowed to dry NATURALLY in a corn crib-- no dryer or massive supply of propane and a bin with a drying floor or batch flow or continuous flow grain dryer needed... Saves a TON of money over drying shelled corn at similar moisture levels! BUT "the market" (meaning elevators) are all pretty much set up for handling shelled corn, and that's what they want, and since nearly everybody has switched to combines, unless they're "selling it locally" like Jacob is doing, there's little point to it. I guess a guy could make the argument to pick and crib dry it over the winter then shell it and sell it in the winter/spring, and spread the cobs and shucks back on the field, but at that point it's probably simpler to just combine it and dry in the bin, a batch dryer, or continuous flow dryer, and pay for the propane to dry it.
Most of what he's picking here is sold to hunters for deer corn, used to bait areas they're hunting in. The ear corn holds up better dumped in the woods than shelled corn would. Some of it he HAS sold to cattle feeders in the past, in which case they grind the whole ear corn cobs and all and the cattle will eat it that way. Better for them cob and all versus straight shelled corn.
OR, just leave the corn in the field until the moisture gets down low enough to minimize drying costs and just accept that you'll have some yield losses to critters and down corn before it gets combined... Later! OL J R :)
Love that corn corn picker
Will you put the 2+2 on the picker
Next year.
in ralf voice im an ear of corn now
now that is what you call a close up view
The deer help you pick too huh? Lol
best farm film ever.
Love the JD green. Grew up with them. Very popular here in iowa! Love your videos but don’t understand your negativity toward JD??
Well now we know how an ear of corn feels😂
The JD picker works ten times better than my new Idea. That’s a good video 👍
Thank you
Why do you pick and not combine
I sell ear to people with money paying my price.
LOL! Thanks for the ride though the picker! LOL
Great footage at the end, well done.
In depth videoing! Literally cool vid👍Keep um coming
The camera angles are worth the corn husker eating the camera, they were awesome! Maybe just don’t reuse the one where it got knocked off haha.
What do you guys do with all of the ears once you harvest it
Sell, sell, sell. Deer hunters have the money and I'm ready to take it.
That’s how to end a video. Try the combine next?? Lol!
The combine wouldn't work so well. Just ask Cole the Cornstar what happens when a camera goes through the combine.
That's a great video!!!
Put it back there
That was f@cking awsome!!!
Cool video man keep them rolling
Buy a combine
Did that last year.
That was awesome! Glad the camera survived.
I love waching picking corn 🌽 thank you
That was great! Haha.
Now i know EXACTLY how a picker works haha!
Good one....... 👍
You put Welkers to shame 😉
Thank you 😊
👍👍👍
You could not film that without breaking the camera if you wanted to. Lol
lol great vid. the life of corn when it get picked at the end lol
Its beautiful weather here also in western Australia. We are making silage bales atm
Damn you were lucky with that camera the 1st time. Ouch with the 2nd, although thanks for the inside story lol.
corn pick to stared yesterday small hobby farm
Get a combine next time m8