Harvesting Pinto Beans

Of course you have to hook everything up to the tractor.  Terry likes to use the 730 to pull the beans

That thing on the front is the bean puller…here’s a better photo of it

 

Then the bean blade

The puller lifts the beans up and the blade cuts them off

 

Moving down the field everything is pushed together into rows

The rows are allowed to dry for week (unless it rains, then a mess occurs)

 

All pulling of the beans occurs in the morning, while the dew is still on the plants.  If you look you can see how dry the bean pods look.  They are very dry.  A little dew holds the pods together so they don’t shatter and spill the beans into the ground.  If a pod shatters and the beans spill, that is then end.  There is not a way to pick up the beans from the dirt.

After a week. It’s time to start combining.  Combining is ALWAYS after lunch.  You don’t want the plants to be wet and clump in the combine and cause a wad mess.  You also don’t want wet beans going into the combine and molding.  If you deliver wet beans to the beanery (where they sort, sack, and sell the beans) they will refuse your load.

For a farmer that is money and time lost.

Dry beans for the combine only!

We are not big farmers and our equipment is not new, but it is paid for and Terry knows how to fix it if something goes wrong.   He also has a small combine herd of combines that he uses for parts since our stuff is really dated.

Here the combine is picking up two rows of a time and shelling them and putting the beans in the hopper

 

The weeds and the bean straw is flung out the back

 

 

Leaving just the straw behind.

Once the day turns to evening and the cool comes on, the farmer must stop.  Lots of time the lights run until the operator just gets too tired and calls it a day.

The hopper of the combine is dumped into the bin of the grain truck

 

When the truck is full, but no over flowing it will be driven to the beanery about 5 miles from our home.  The trash you see in the beans  (weed leaves that made through the trasher into the beans) will be screened out.  Then the beans are sacked ready for market.

But first….we got to get them there!

After we get done with the pintos our next crop to harvest will be the corn.  But that won’t be until the end of September.

Linda

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Middle of Summer

Terry finished cultivating the corn and the pinto beans. 

He likes to use the 730 because the clutch is a hand clutch and not a foot clutch.

There will be one more cultivation of the pinto beans, but the corn is too tall now.  As soon as the bean shoot feelers all tractor work is done until harvest.  The only thing left (on tractor work) is making alfalfa into hay. 

Of course we will continute to irrigate, changing the water every 8 hours.  Water is short, with reports that it could get shorter.

It’s hot.  But we are having some moisture flowing in from Mexico after noon.

We cool down when it comes in which is really nice.

But we heat back up after the storm moves on. 

 That’s summer for you in our part of the high mountain desert!

Here’s how I cultivate! 🙂  This hoe never seems to leave my hand…I have it my yard, in the garden, and helping remove Canada Thistle, Star Thistle, Sticker Weed, Nodding Thistle, and other nasty stuff, which gets between the bean plants.  Once the beans shoot feelers I won’t have to be out there, but until then….

Summer is lots of work, but I would rather have summer than winter.  Terry, now, he would rather have cold, dark, dreary, drab winter.  Oh, oops!  I think those are my words. 

The Fourth of July is tomorrow.   (and then by Tuesday they should have the part to fix my internet receiver! YEA!)

Happy 4th, everyone!

Linda

Part of Our Vacation was a Tractor Pull

Not one of those really fast tractor pulls, but just your plain farm tractor pull.

Loading-the-530

Both Evan and Terry drove.  Terry had the 530 JD and Evan drove the 730 JD.

Loading-730

The pull was based on how much weight the tractor could pull, Terry did 170% of his tractors’ weight

Terry-Pulling

and Evan did 174%. 

Evan-on-Tractor

No I don’t know what the tractor weighed.  My job is to sit there and film the pull and remember the weight.  The rest is up to them.   🙂   Works for me!  I just have to remember to switch from video to still and sometimes I don’t get that part right.

John Deere Days

Ralph and Pat Mangum, owners of the John Deere dealerships in Delta, Montrose and Grand Junction, hosted their 50th year of being in business on February 7th. 

Several of the local farmers were asked to bring in their tractors so visitors could admire the 50 years of being green.

Terry was asked to bring in his 530

530-john-deere-days

And the 730

 730-at-john-deere-days1

We have others but these are representative of 50 years.) 

majories-dolls

 I also had to get a picture of Pat Mangum with the John Deere Porcelain dolls Terry’s mother made for her.