THE WAYBACK MACHINE

This week’s farming update from Ben

At least it’s not muddy. 

I mentioned the opera movie on Saturday. Kelly and I are going. Lots of video and looks like some fun scenery so I’ll enjoy that part. And having a date with Kelly. And popcorn. And I’ll get a nap during the rest of it. But the projections look cool! 

Same old, same old here. More snow, more cold. It hasn’t been this cold in a few years. Anything above minus 20F doesn’t really count you know. Minus 20, OK, now we’re talking cold. It’s rather exhilarating isn’t it? It was -21F Friday morning.

I made sure the chickens had extra feed and I filled their water and they puff out their feathers like wild birds do and they’re fine. The two chickens living in the garage usually walk down to the crib during the day, but today everybody just stays inside.

You know, I can give them a bucket of fresh water and they’ll still drink out of the bucket of dirty water. The dogs do the same thing. Here’s a pail of fresh water and they’re over drinking out of a mud puddle.

Fresh water
dirty water has more flavor.

I was part of a zoom meeting this past week on cover crops, and in a few weeks is a meeting on food grade oats. A lot of continuing education happens in winter for farmers. Because, you know, we don’t have anything going on… (sarcasm!) 

I thought I’d talk about the history of our farm. 

My Great Grandparents came to the farm in 1898.

My grandfather was 4. They arrived from Germany in 1882 and had moved around this area a bit before ending up in our valley. Gustave and Ernestina Hain arrived in the US with 3 girls. Three more girls and my grandfather Carl were born here. My grandfather wrote an autobiography in 1973 and I’m getting some photos from that and some photos I have at home. He loved cutting the head off one picture and glueing it onto another. The original photoshop. 

Grandpa and Grandma way back when.

Here is the oldest photo of the farm.

The dairy barn in the background was built in 1920.  There’s a granary out of sight behind the house that was built in 1899. Can you see a child playing in the road in the foreground? One of my uncles, never been sure who that was. 

This next photo was taken sometime in the 1950’s. 

The dairy barn in the lower portion has been expanded twice. My grandpa, uncle, and dad added to one end in the early 1940’s. Then in the 1950’s dad added the lean-to on the back. That allowed a second row of cows inside the barn. 

The granary in the upper right corner was originally twice as big as I remember it. Grandpa writes that when the barn was finished, people wanted a dance. “I remember that nice floor, 24 x 48 of clear space. There was a big crowd, about four boys to each girl. Everybody was having a great time until a fight started. After the fight was stopped, Father was very angry. He said “You better all go home now.” and nobody stopped to ask questions. So you see even in the good old days, a few can always spoil a good time.” 

Dad had torn off the front half by the time I was around. He said the back of the barn was so dark the calves would end up blind. There was part of a stone wall standing until I pushed it over last summer. I wanted to push it over 25 years ago and dad didn’t think that was a good idea. So I kept working around it. After I pushed it over, it was too dang big and heavy to move and I haven’t managed to break it apart yet, so I’m still working around it except now it’s lying flat and ten feet further into my way. The granary collapsed in 2013 with a heavy snow. We’ve salvaged some boards from it. The frame was built with wood pegs. Kind of a cool old barn. 

In the left middle of the photo are two old buildings I don’t remember. Dad said there was a machine shed there, because after every rain I’d pick up nails in the road. So many tree’s around the house! And notice the one silo by the barn. 

This photo is from 1969. 

The new house was built in 1968, and in the bottom right corner is the outhouse we used while living in the machine shed. The old house was torn down and the new house built in the same place. I was only 4 at the time, so I don’t remember anything about the old house, and just a few tidbits of living in the machine shed. There’s a corn crib, which is now the chicken coop in the middle right. A new silo behind the barn, built in 1968. And you can sort of see the granary minus the front half. 

My parents sold some land in 1967, i think that’s how they afforded a silo AND a new house in 1968. 

My dad was one of 5 boys. The three oldest served in WWII. Dad, being the youngest, had to stay home and help on the farm. He always regretted that. He had a collection of rifle shells and bullets used in the war. I heard he had them mounted on a board. Apparently they were live shells. Mom never liked it, especially with kids in the house, and when the new corn crib was being built, she took the board down and threw it in the cement. Eventually Dad forgave her. 

Notice all the tree’s behind the barn. They will be missing in the next few years. There’s a pole barn back there now and I haven’t figured out yet when that was built. The old silo in the front was torn down about 1975. We remember that because my brother and dad used a sledge hammer to knock out silo blocks and I sat on the hill with my brothers girlfriend and he met her in ’75. It is always fascinating that you need to knock out 3/4’s of the blocks before the silo will fall over. Dad hauled the refuse back behind the barn where the pole barn is. 

1995

Quite a jump to his photo taken about 1995. We added an addition to the back of the house just before our daughter was born. The pile of trees in the field in the bottom was from that project. The second silo from 1976 is there, the pole barn is there. 

With all the internet mapping these days, a photo of your house is no big deal. It used to be *quite* the deal when the airplay would fly over and a month later some guy would drive in with a photo of the farm. Farmers were suckers for those photos. And think about it; everything you worked for, all in one photo to show off. With any luck they took it from different directions over the years so you could see the background. It wasn’t cheap; it was a few hundred dollars it seems like. Less if you didn’t buy the frame. 

Somewhere I have a photo with me standing in front of the barn. I heard that low flying airplane and walked out there and got into the picture.

This picture is grandma and grandpa and my four uncles. Taken before dad was born. He came around in 1925.

Grandpa didn’t write about this photo. Not sure I believe he was only 16 here.

Grandpa wrote, “When I was 17,18,19,20, and 21, I call them my fun years. The less said about them, the better. I wll say they passed by very quickly Oh yes, those were the days.”

I’d sure like to know what was up, that rascal. He and his fiancé eloped to Red Wing and got married in about 1918. Being the only boy, he also had to stay home and farm and missed WW1.

I’ve always said I have really deep roots. 128 years in one place.

I’ve got shirts almost that old.

EVER WORN CHAPS? FUZZY ONES? EVER NEEDED CHAPS?

15 thoughts on “THE WAYBACK MACHINE”

  1. Yesterday, I was on Zoom with a couple here in Ohio who raise chickens for their eggs.
    They cut out several times to get the eggs before they froze. Waaaaay below normal here.
    No chaps but a shirt that would put Buck Owens to shame. Blue and Orange with gold tassels.

    Liked by 3 people

  2. on the farm its possible to track by buildings. ive always loved pictures of minneapolis from days gone by. hennipen ave and the river. the old minneapolis intatute of arts buildings. the corner of an intersection from 1950 or 60 showing grocery stores and gas stations id forgotten bars and restaurants hotels and department stores. buildings with character or the 1960’s buildings without any character. pictures of yellowstone in 1900 with people 3 feet away from the hole. nature before people had their way and built stuff that changed the view.
    nice post today ben. love the pictures and the commentary
    i wore chaps when i was 3. i had to. i was a cowboy. hat boots chaps vest 6 shooter. me and wild bill hickock. andy devine was his trusty sidekick on tv.
    surprising how 20 below insnt all that cold if the wind isnt there. i used to say -10 was the ideal temp for cross coubtryy skiing. icy mustache though.
    birthday party today for wife 22nd mom 25th and sons significant other 30th. with the 5 grandkids and my brothers family there will be 17 with two chicago daughters on zoom

    Liked by 4 people

  3. This is great, Ben, love the photos and the story.

    Closest I came to chaps was getting some for son Joel, when we went to a rodeo (in that old Bloomington stadium before the Mpls. downtown one – Metropolitan Stadium??) He wanted to be a cowboy, had the hat already and a cowboy shirt.

    I played Roy Rogers with my friend Sandy – I would be Dale Evans, and our little sisters were Trigger and Bullet (the dog). For some reason we never thought about costuming, but we would use the neighbors’ porches during our chases…

    Liked by 1 person

  4. RIse and Don Your Inner Cowboy, Baboons!

    I love these pictures of the chaps. Surely your grandfather had been influenced by Jesse James hijinx in Northfield. The smaller children in the pictures appear to be in ruddy-cheeked good health. 128 years of the farm is quite the span of years and something to be proud of. I remember people buying the aerial pictures of farms. That became such a big status symbol to have one of those hanging in the farmhouse. I also remember a lot of adult scuttlebutt and gossip whispered about people who had “that kind of money” that they would just waste it on such a picture. So Ben, your people would have been that kind.

    I cannot remember if I had chaps with my cowboy outfit. I had a hat, vest, play six shooters with a holster, a stick horse, and maybe I had a pair of snap-on chaps. I yearned for cowboy boots, but those were not to be. I galloped around town on the stick horse, pretending to be Annie Oakley, pretending to shoot bullets. I loved that outfit.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. The only folks who wore chaps back in western ND were rodeo performers. It isn’t that thorny, so chaps for ranchers weren’t all that necessary. None of the rodeo chaps are furry, as I recall.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. No chaps here, fuzzy or otherwise. I rode plenty of horses in my youth, but I never needed chaps. I rode bareback a lot too, and in shorts (scratchy).

    Those photos of your farm are great, Ben! I remember those aerial photos of farms and other properties too. We had one of our woods in Steele County (that was sold in 2024). I wanted one of our place on the lake, but Dad didn’t, and he had all the money. I hadn’t thought of that for years.

    Hey, how about those peaceful protests yesterday? I’m just so proud to be a Minnesotan!

    Liked by 3 people

  7. I had a couple used gunbelts as a kid. Mom didn’t like guns that much, but heck, even a stick could be a gun so it was hard to win that one mom. I remember buying a toy automatic rifle, plastic, made a ‘ratta-tat’ sound when pulling the trigger. Mom did. not. like. that.
    So that’s why I only got used, left over gun belts. I remember one even had wire holding it together.

    I have orange chainsaw chaps!

    Liked by 2 people

  8. That’s a nice family (and farm) history, Ben. The family farm on my mother’s side had been going since 1881 near St. Joseph, MN. Mom’s second cousin who owned the farm and was still farming the land died in 2024. I don’t know if his son is keeping it going.

    My son had suede chaps and a vest and a cowboy hat. I was one of those moms like yours who discouraged guns, so he didn’t have a gun to go with his outfit. As a result, everything else became a gun: sticks (including carrot sticks), LEGOs, you name it. We broke down and got him a space-age type gun with flashing lights and buzzing sounds. Figured it was better than something that looked like a real gun.

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