When I was a kid everybody was welcome on everybody's property. If you did something stupid, your parents got called and the indiscretion was dealt with in manner satisfactory to all involved. If you were old enough to know better and got caught stealing apples or gas, you got a load of rock salt or birdshot in yer butt for your trouble. Nobody gave a hoot about how many partridge or rabbits you shot on whose property. We all had bike/atv trails through our property and nobody cared as long as everyone stayed on the trails. Then the deer moved in and everyone got serious about hunting, and the next generation of kids weren't as considerate as the youth of yesteryear. Their parents were as likely to call you out for daring to insinuate their little Johnny might possibly have done something inconsiderate or outright wrong as they are to discipline their kids. There is still an atv trail across our property and things are okay, generally, but I have had to resort to, after several warnings, have a few arrested for property damage or trespassing during hunting season. But for the most part, everyone stays on their side of the fence these days. We don't have quite the problems with vandalism and theft in the immediate area that other places do (yet) so it isn't too bad.
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Today's Featured Article - Uncle Cecil's Super A Lives Again - by Mike Purcell. A week or so out of most of my childhood summers was often spent with my Uncle Cecil and Aunt Sissie in the small East Texas town of Maydelle on their 80 acre farm. Some of my fondest memories of these visits are those of learning to drive a tractor at the helm of Uncle Cecil’s 1948 Farmall Super A. Uncle Cecil was the second owner of this wonderful little tractor, but it was almost as though he had adopted an infant. The original owner was a man from Minnesota who bought her from a local dea
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