Town had power from a small local company, after WWII, they expanded into the rural areas, I don't know if it was through REA or not. The power lines came by our farm and to the neighbor's in 1945. Dad was promised power by spring of 1946, because of this, he bought an electric milking machine and a refrigerated can cooler, and cut no ice that winter. By June he was still milking with the gas motor, and trying to keep the cans cool with spring water. He finally took a handful of rejection slips from the creamery down to the electric company and asked the owner if he was going to wire up the barn, or start buying milk.They were up there stringing wire the next morning. It was the next year before they strung wires to the house. One of those poles went down in the windstorm we had here last week. They will be replacing everything next week.
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Today's Featured Article - Box Plow Blues - by Tom Schwarz. One of the first implements most tractor owners obtain is the box plow. For very little money, this piece of equipment promises to plow and flatten any hill or vale on your ranch road or farm. At least that's what I thought! As simple as a box plow appears, it can be rather challenging to make work correctly. In our sandy soils of Florida, traction is king. You can never have wide enough tires or heavy enough weights to get all the traction you want … unless you own a monster tractor. U
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