''Plowin' corn"? Instead of cultivating corn?
Starting your own subforum Richard? My area it's Planting corn, most is no-till.
My dear mother told me to put a tin can over a settin' hen's head to garter her egg, it worked to!
It's nice an' warm under there.
Used to be called plowing corn here. It's a thing of the past now. I never plowed a lot of corn, but tobacco used to require plowing at least 3 or 4 times, and I've done plenty of that.
Punching cattle? Or is that rancher talk?
Wabi, your 'layin by corn and my cotton, reminded me of something one of my great uncles told me. It has to do with juneteenth.
Back during the days of hand chopping and hoeing cotton, you had to hoe the cotton a few times. Chopping came first and then, depending on the rain, you had to hoe it at least 1 time and some years 3 times, but that was unusual. The last time you hoed the cotton, remember it is not too tall, they would come thru and plow the middles and throw soil up on the rows. This was laying by the cotton. Everyone wanted their cotton laid-by before the middle of June. Once this was done, the field hands could/would have a celebration. Thus Juneteenth.
I know that isn't what the scholars say, but some claim that there was a celebration after the crops were laid by, way before the civil war. It could be that there just wasn't a set date for that celebration.
We'll never know.
''Plowin' corn"? Instead of cultivating corn?
Two different things . Plowing is breaking ground with a plow . Cultivating is running a cultivator through after you plow, disc, plant and your plants have come up . It gets rid of the weeds trying to take over between the rows . Maybe your part of the country calls it different but that's how it works around here .
Does anybody still use a rotary hoe?
John, I bought a M&W hoe at the Carroll Machinery sale years ago, and we've never used it.
I'll add, the organic farmers still harrow, and rotatory hoe crops.
Yea plowin corn was refereeing to cultivating weeds
Shucking corn is still used. A throw back to hand picking and shucking
Growing up in West Texas the topic of rain was the first order of conversation.
Well, when ya think we might get some rain?
You had any rain?
Boy, we sure need a rain.
Someone gets a good rain in a dry spell.
'What Church do you go to?"
Someone gets a good rain in a dry spell.
'What Church do you go to?"
Yall must be paying the preacher more'en we do.
Growing up in West Texas the topic of rain was the first order of conversation.
Well, when ya think we might get some rain?
You had any rain?
Boy, we sure need a rain.
Still starts out this way here in S. Texas.
West Texas is a given there twern't any rain..
Neighbor lady stopped by yesterday, she’s in her 80’s. In the course of a discussion, she mentioned as a young girl one of her chores was to “oil the corn”. That involved dabbing some mineral oil on the base of each corn husk’s tassel/silk to discourage insects (worms?) from getting in and ruining it.
This was for the family‘s good eating corn.
Growing up in West Texas the topic of rain was the first order of conversation.
Well, when ya think we might get some rain?
You had any rain?
Boy, we sure need a rain.
Yep.
"Rostin' ears." Field corn.
Over yonder.....down yonder......in a little while......bout that far....bout that much.....just bout there.... how you doing....pretty good.....don't bar down on it too hard, might break.
A hoot and a holler down round the bend.
"Recalcitrant".
My grandpa was an old farmer. Ran his entire dairy farm with a JD A and a JD 50 til he sold the farm. So, old................
I never, EVER heard the word "recalcitrant" used or spoken any other place before or after. But it was ALWAYS in reference to an uncooperative hog. A "recalcitrant hog".
Poke
It's not something you do with your index finger.
It's a bag.
Or greens, early in the spring. miles
Health:
If it ain’t my elbow it’s my a$$hole.