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The JD Dealer Called Him a Fool for Keeping That Old Farmall… 10 Years Later, He Still Had His Farm

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The morning Harold Brennan walked into

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Coladin County implement with cash

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folded in his shirt pocket. Every man in

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that showroom could smell the dust on

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him before they saw his face. It was

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August 1967,

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middle of a drought summer that had

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turned half the top soil in southern

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Kansas into something closer to ash and

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earth. And Harold had driven his

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battered 59 Chevy pickup 17 miles from

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his place outside Meridian just to look

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at tractors he probably couldn't afford.

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The dealer, a man named Vernon Pitts

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with sllicked hair and a tie even in 100

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degree heat, took one look at Harold's

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worn boots and faded denim, and decided

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right then this wasn't a customer worth

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his Saturday morning. Harold was 32 that

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summer, lean as fence wire with hands

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that told the story of every rock he'd

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ever pulled from a field and every

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engine he'd ever coax back to life with

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nothing but stubbornness and borrow

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parts. He farmed 420 acres his

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grandfather had broken with mules back

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in ught nine land that rolled gentle

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along blackjack creek where the

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cottonwoods still grew thick enough to

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offer shade when the sun turned vicious.

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He ran wheat mostly some Milo kept a

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dozen head of her cows more out of habit

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than profit and he did it all with

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equipment that other farmers had already

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traded away or left to rust behind their

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barns. His main tractor was a 1949

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Pharmm. Red paint faded to something

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closer to pink in places with a wide

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front end and enough hours on the engine

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that the serial number plate had worn

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smooth. Harold's father had bought it

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used in 53 and Harold had learned to

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drive it when he was 8 years old.

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Standing between his father's knees on

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the seat, small hands gripping the

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steering wheel while his father worked

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the clutch and throttle. That tractor

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had plowed every acre the Brennan place

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for 18 years, pulled every wagon,

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powered every belt, and Harold knew its

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quirks the way some men knew their

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wives, knew exactly how much choke it

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needed on cold mornings, and which

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cylinder light to miss when the timing

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drifted. But standing in that implement

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dealership showroom with the new John

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Deere 4020 gleaming under the

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fluorescent lights, green and yellow

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paint so bright it almost hurt to look

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at, Harold felt something he didn't much

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like feeling. felt small and behind and

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old-fashioned in a world that was racing

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forward whether he kept up or not.

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Vernon Pitts finally wandered over,

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hands in his pockets. Smile that didn't

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reach his eyes. Help you with something?

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Harold nodded toward the 4020. Like to

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know what you're asking for one of

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those? Vernon's smile widened just a

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fraction. That's a serious machine. 95

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horsepower power steering, 8-speed

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transmission, hydraulic remote valves.

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That's the future of farming right

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there. We're asking 4,800, but for a

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serious buyer, I might find some room.

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Harold did the math in his head,

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compared it to what he had in savings,

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what the weed had brought in July, what

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he still owed the bank on his land note.

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The numbers didn't work. Not even close.

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But he asked anyway, "What would you

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give me on trade for my farmal?"

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Vernon's expression changed. Got a

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little harder around the edges. Which

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farml M49 model runs good. New clutch

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last spring. Rebuilt the carburetor

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myself 2 years back. Vernon actually

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laughed. Short and sharp. A 49M. Hell,

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friend. That thing's old enough to vote.

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I couldn't give you more than 200 for

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it. and that's only if I'm feeling

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generous. Probably end up scrapping it

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for parts. The showroom had gone quiet.

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Two other men browsing near the

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implement section had stopped to listen,

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and Harold could feel their eyes on him

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could feel the judgment in the silence.

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"$200,"

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Harold said slowly. Not a question, just

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letting the number sit in the air

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between them. "That's charity," Vernon

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said, warming to his subject now, plain

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to his audience. Nobody wants those old

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M's anymore. They're slow. They're

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small. They're obsolete. You're probably

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burning more in repairs every year than

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that tractor's worth. Smart farmers are

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upgrading, getting equipment that can

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cover ground, that can make them

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profitable. Guys still running that old

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Farmal International junk. Well, he let

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the sentence hang, shrugged. That's why

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half the small operators are selling

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out. Harold felt heat rise in his chest,

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but kept his voice level. "That

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tractor's pulled every pound wheat I've

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grown for 14 years." "And that's exactly

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my point," Vernon said, leaning against

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a 4020's rear tire, getting comfortable.

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"You're working twice as hard to grow

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half as much. This machine here, you

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could cut your field time in half. Pull

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a bigger plow, cover more acres. That's

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how the successful operations are doing

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it now." But hey, he spread his hands.

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If you want to keep nursing that old

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relic along, that's your business. Just

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don't come crying when you can't compete

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anymore. One of the other men in the

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showroom, someone Harold didn't

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recognize, actually chuckled at that.

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Harold stood there another moment,

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looking at the 4020, doing the math one

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more time, even though he knew it

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wouldn't change. Then he nodded once,

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turned, and walked out into the August

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heat without another word. The drive

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back to farm felt longer than 17 miles.

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Now, before we go further, I want to

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know what you're thinking right now.

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Would you have bit your tongue like

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Harold did? Or would you have said

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something back to Vernon Pitts? Drop a

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comment and let me know because I think

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how a man handles that kind of

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disrespect us a lot about his character.

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And Harold's response that day was about

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to prove something nobody in Coladin

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County expected. Harold's wife, Sarah,

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met him at the kitchen door when he got

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home, saw his face, and knew without

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asking how it had gone. She'd been a

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farm wife of 9 years by then, had

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learned to read drought in the sky and

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disappointment in her husband's

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shoulders, and she had her own opinions

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about new tractors and debt. "They

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wouldn't work with you?" she asked,

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pouring him coffee, even though the

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house was already hot as a kil. Offer me

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200 for the M, Harold said. Sitting at

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the table, they bought an auction for

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$15. called a charity. Sarah set the

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coffee down harder than necessary. $200

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for a tractor that works every day. Said

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it's obsolete. Said smart farmers are

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upgrading. Smart farmers are also

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selling out. Sarah said quietly.

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Meridian Bank foreclosed on a Hendricks

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place last month. Bill Mohouse lost his

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farm to auction in July. Both of them

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bought new equipment 3 years ago. Both

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of them got buried when wheat prices

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dropped. Harold wrapped his hands around

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the coffee cup. Vernon Pitts basically

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called me a fool in front of half the

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county. Said, "I'm working twice as hard

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to grow half as much." "Are you?" Maybe.

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Probably. I don't know, Sarah. I just

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know that tractor works and I know what

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I can fix on it. And I know I don't owe

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anybody money for it. Sarah sat down

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across from him, reached across the

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table, and took his hand. Then we keep

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the farmal and Vernon Pitts can go

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straight to hell. Harold looked up at

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her, saw the steel in her eyes that had

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made him ask her to marry him in the

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first place, and felt something settle

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in his chest, felt a decision click into

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place like a plow dropping into soil.

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Yeah, he said. Yeah, I think that's

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exactly what we do. But keeping the

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farmal meant something more than just

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stubbornness. It meant Harold had to

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become a different kind of farmer. had

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to learn things most men were

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forgetting, had to develop skills that

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the newer equipment was making obsolete.

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He spent his evenings at fall with

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