Should a 60 year old lifetime bachelor get married?

Farming the 160 that I grew up on, and also have a full-time job. I've enjoyed my independence, but now that I'm getting into my "mature" years I'm beginning to wonder if having a wife might be a good idea.

But I am also wondering if a guy like me who has lived alone most of his life would make a decent husband.
Would married life for a lifetime bachelor be ok, or a disaster?

I'm not in a relationship now with anyone. But I do have one "dependent", and that's my Chihuahua dog. And she's definitely the "first thing" in my life, so I hope any (potential) future wife would be ok with that!

Advice?
 
Being the same age and having been married for 36 years now,I can tell you that I sure wouldn't want to be alone. I get more concerned the older I get,what with the potential for "I've fallen and I can't get up".
Having never been married though and being so set in your ways and marrying a woman who's also set in her ways,you might be better off staying single unless you're real easy going.
I sure wouldn't have the patience to break in a new one. They might be shinny and new for a while,but eventually the new will wear off.
 
Several years back a friend about 10 years older than you, and in the same situation, asked me the same question. Luckily for him he unexpectedly had a heart attack and died before he could screw up his life that bad!
 
I'd say no. A wonderful wife would be a nice replacement for the dog but unless you would be willing to put the gal first it can't work. You have gotten used to living alone. I don't see any use messing it up.
 
I had been divorced for quite a while. Met up with a gal from the past that I had always been kinda sweet on. After a whirlwind romance we got married. Both of us are miserable now!

I do know others that have done the same and are very happy. Just be very careful!
Jay
 
If you're going to put the dog first, forget it.

No woman would ever be happy playing second fiddle to a dog. And I couldn't blame her.
 
WOW now I like that reply!!! Was a bach for a long time and you bett..I made the mistake. The ex B witch is long gone. Todays world it is just not worth it!
 
Keep the dog #1. i'm older than you,been married 3 times and women can't stand a man who has to farm. I have a 6y/o daughter who lives with her mother who bugs me to try again so she can live on the farm but i don't want one young enough to raise or another who lives to complain.Make arrangements to dispose of your estate,then play Russian roulette with an automatic;it's safer. Experience speaking at 66. My dog is a LOVABLE mutt.
 
(quoted from post at 10:51:29 05/09/15) Farming the 160 that I grew up on, and also have a full-time job. I've enjoyed my independence, but now that I'm getting into my "mature" years I'm beginning to wonder if having a wife might be a good idea.

But I am also wondering if a guy like me who has lived alone most of his life would make a decent husband.
Would married life for a lifetime bachelor be ok, or a disaster?

I'm not in a relationship now with anyone. But I do have one "dependent", and that's my Chihuahua dog. And she's definitely the "first thing" in my life, so I hope any (potential) future wife would be ok with that!

Advice?
robably wouldn't stay long & take your farm when she leaves!
 
Gee, I always thought Electrical or Legal questions drew everyone and their bother in law and Billy Bob and Bubba (all experts of course) out of the woodwork, but this may top them all???

If you made it this long why change and risk it lol

John T 45 years with still my same "first wife" Gosh she's a lucky woman
a190958.jpg
 
If your tired of all that peace and quiet you are probably used to getting married will sure cure it.
 
Been married twice. First divorced me. second died 4years ago. At now 61 just really not interested. Don't know anyone or where to go out to look. Lots of young things out there but I dress funny and proably smell bad.
 
(quoted from post at 07:51:29 05/09/15) Farming the 160 that I grew up on, and also have a full-time job. I've enjoyed my independence, but now that I'm getting into my "mature" years I'm beginning to wonder if having a wife might be a good idea.

But I am also wondering if a guy like me who has lived alone most of his life would make a decent husband.
Would married life for a lifetime bachelor be ok, or a disaster?

I'm not in a relationship now with anyone. But I do have one "dependent", and that's my Chihuahua dog. And she's definitely the "first thing" in my life, so I hope any (potential) future wife would be ok with that!

Advice?
on't be stupid,..you to set in your ways for that to end well.
Marry one has to do when young.
A sapling is easier to bend and shape than a stiff old tree.
It took me 43 years to train my wife(first and only) and she still kicks outside of the traces now and then :)
 
All I can say is don't try to force it. The only way to have a great marriage is to let God lead you to the right lady. If you try to force it yourself, it's a nightmare.

I'd rather be alone than to be with someone who is abusive and won't treat me right. Your dog will treat you much better than the wrong woman. Now, If you're lucky enough to hear God and let him lead you to the one he picks, that's an incredible experience.

I was married 2 months short of 30 years. I did my best and finally didn't have any choice but to cut that one loose. I dated many insane women after that. I even sent one back to prison. I've been divorced for 5 years now, and 2 years ago, God led me to a lady more incredible than I could have ever imagined. We're going to get married on July 4th. I'm 54 years old. The only way I would get married again is if she's as awesome as she is. I thank God for her every day. I also tell her every day how lucky I am and that God Likes Me A LOT! :D
 
Like every marriage, it depends on the couple. I wouldn't rush into anything, nor rule it out.
 
That's what I told my boys when they were dating uppity town girls. Someday you're gonna wish you'd married a barefoot hillbilly who can skin a catfish and make biscuits from scratch.
 
Littlefarmer: I was married for a total of 48 years, but it seemed longer. I'm now nearly 74 and living alone. I am more at peace now than at any time in my life. I am quite content with my own company. There is a difference between being lonely and being alone. I don't know what lonely feels like. I do have a ladyfriend my age, a widow whose company I enjoy very much (and not for what you're thinking) and whose personality is very compatible and complementary to mine. Neither of us wants to get married; she has a nice home and is financially secure; I have a nice home and am financially secure. Her assets are for her kids; my assets are for my kids.

You have obviously adapted to being alone, so, I am curious as to why you now at age 60 feel the need to explore the possibilities of matrimony. Do you want a child, or children? Well, sorry, but it's too late for that---you just don't have enough good time left to offer a child. Sure, I know it's been done--a lot--but the odds just aren't good. Also, having a child means having a wife of child-bearing age. Is a girl in her 20s or 30s going to be interested in you? Maybe, but...? Is a woman in her 40s going to be willing to do the risky pregnancy thing for a 60-something man? In any event, you'd be marrying a much younger woman and I speak authoritatively when I say that's not what you want. At 60 you're probably fit, robust and vigorous. The gray at your temples probably makes you look like Clark Gable. In a very few short years those gray hairs are going to joined by wild hairs growing from your ears and eyebrows; by sagging jowls and skin that develops an amazing array of lines, wrinkles and spots. She begins to see you as a doddering old man with a funny smell who can no longer cut the mustard. She realizes she no longer likes mustard. Love and lust turn to pity, then revulsion. At best you become her elderly father, consigned to her care.

So, further examining your awakening matrimonial leanings, is it your motivation to find someone who provides ready access for the satisfaction of your "urges"? I really don't think so; you've apparently managed to deal with your "urges" for lo these many years No need to buy the cow now, as they say.

Are you belatedly taking into consideration societal expectations? The ones that say every good man should be married? Here again, you've almost outlived that expectation.

You hint that you might be looking for someone to care for you in your dotage, and to be near should you fall. There's nothing wrong with having someone near to monitor your well-being, but I don't think that would be a sufficient basis for marriage.

I could go on, but the point is, look within yourself and carefully answer all the questions about why you are considering marriage after all this time. If you find that perfect woman (notice I did not say "person") who fulfills you, completes you, and whose absence makes you miserable, by all means go for it. We should all meet that kind of soul-mate.

But before you step into actual marriage, I have one more word for you: PRE-NUP.
 
Get yourself a Filipino wife. They love older men who will care for them, and they won't cook your dog like the Chinese brides.
 
Do what you enjoy. The option is possibly complex in that leaving the ""Farm"" to a person in your family is an ingredient. It could be your yet undiscovered wife. Jim
 
I knew a man that married the 1st time when he was 60 and married his HS sweetheart. She was a widow and they were married 33 years when he died. It worked for him but of course there are no guarantees. I've been married 32 years and have been happy but I always tell my wife if I get out of this one alive, there won't be another.
 
was married for 44 yrs, same wonderful woman lost her last year, 64 and no desire to try and find anyone else---yet. lonesome yes sometimes- alone no, have lots of family to keep me occupied. Besides that, didn't really lose her, I know where to find her someday.
 
When we lived in a retirement community, we saw several old men marry "lonely widows". It turned out that the only thing that the widows were lonely for was the man's money. The guys were foolish and hadn't insisted on a prenuptial agreement, so they were the big losers.

If you've made it this long without a wife, just continue that way. The older you are, the harder it is to adjust to another person. If you can't make the adjustment and want them gone, then a prenuptial agreement is the only thing that will protect you.
 
John that's a great photo, where was it taken? I'll bet its the opposite though, you're lucky to have her LOL !
 
I wouldn't and haven't.

I've been divorced since 1978 and am much too independent to remarry.

Of course, there are advantages but your independence will vanish.

Then there is the obvious risk factor.

Dean
 
My brother decided at 60 he wanted someone to keep him company in his retirement years. Found a gal his age who was divorced and got married, for the first time. He retired, brought a home in the villages in Fl. and is spending some of the money he'd been hording all his life. That was six years ago and he seems happy with it.
 
(quoted from post at 09:19:11 05/09/15) All I can say is don't try to force it. The only way to have a great marriage is to let God lead you to the right lady. If you try to force it yourself, it's a nightmare.

I'd rather be alone than to be with someone who is abusive and won't treat me right. Your dog will treat you much better than the wrong woman. Now, If you're lucky enough to hear God and let him lead you to the one he picks, that's an incredible experience.

I was married 2 months short of 30 years. I did my best and finally didn't have any choice but to cut that one loose. I dated many insane women after that. I even sent one back to prison. I've been divorced for 5 years now, and 2 years ago, God led me to a lady more incredible than I could have ever imagined. We're going to get married on July 4th. I'm 54 years old. The only way I would get married again is if she's as awesome as she is. I thank God for her every day. I also tell her every day how lucky I am and that God Likes Me A LOT! :D
ot the marbles a little messed up??
 
(quoted from post at 09:39:00 05/09/15) That's what I told my boys when they were dating uppity town girls. Someday you're gonna wish you'd married a barefoot hillbilly who can skin a catfish and make biscuits from scratch.
hats similar to what i told me boys too.
Ye think they listened?
 
Crater Lake Natl Park on July 5 a few years ago, the road was still snowed in July 4. That's the bluest colored lake you will ever see, around 1900 feet deep if I recall.

John T
 
That's a matter of opinion lol

See you and your skinny bride next January I hope, bring that spare set of keys to your shop, Id do it for you!!!

John T
 
Don't close your mind to a good lady but get another dog first. The dogs will always wag their tail and be glad to see you WHENever you come home!
 
If your heart is in it then yes do it.
I got married for the first time a year and a half ago - at 60.
I got by just fine without a wife. Did a lot of things most men who marry and have families will never get to do.
A man doesn't need a wife. Not as much as a woman needs a husband.
I'm having a lot of fun and I'm real glad I finally met the right woman.
 
(quoted from post at 13:24:00 05/09/15) Don't close your mind to a good lady but get another dog first. The dogs will always wag their tail and be glad to see you WHENever you come home!
ep.
Lock both the wife and the dog in the trunk of your car.
Wait an hr, open the trunk and see which on of the 2 is happy to see ye :lol:
 
Mine came as close as you can get I guess. One got himself a Virginia gal who gardens big time and makes herbal remedies. The other one has a local country gal who,I found out the hard way DOES know the difference between a field of wheat and a field of alfalfa. lol
 
That is up to you! I do not recommend marriage, just get a girlfriend, they are funner, or get two girlfriends! LOL I tell my wife she was funner when she was my girlfriend, but she says no, I can't have a girlfriend, see, no fun!
 
We have been married going on 52 years,have seven kids, 17 grandkids,she does her thing and I do mine about 50% of the time. Our home sure would be quiet without her.
 
A lot of good advice below. It is important to avoid women who had a hen-pecked husband. Important also to be friends with her children. I find that people who are "control freaks" contribute to unhappy marriages. Necessary to go to premarital counseling, valuable insights are learned there. Many clergymen are trained in this. If searching, you should cruise the churches, many widows in our age bracket can be found there. Opposites attract but cohabit in misery. That describes my first marriage. I've been in my second marriage 18 years and we are still looking forward to our first fight.
 

I had a neighbor, Arthur, who died two years ago at about 68. He had lived his whole life a bachelor on the farm where he grew up. He milked Holsteins with his brother Stubby, who was miserably married for about fifteen years, until the wife left, then it was the two of them again for about ten years. Then suddenly at about 63 Arthur had a girlfriend. She used to come to the farm everyday and help Arthur sleep, which he did most mid-days. Finally they left and shacked up and seemed to be very happy until he passed on about four years later. It seemed to suit Arthur very well, which I guess surprised all if us who knew him greatly.
 
Those kinds of places are really something, because you can usually see deep into the water. We used to swim at a flooded stone quarry north of here, its been said they hit water, had to abandon it and leave all the equipment there, blue, cool and deep, best place to swim on a hot day.
 
I was married 60 years for 20 years. Been alone for 15 years now and there is no way I would ever do it again. For one thing, I'm too set in my ways. Number 2, I have ten girlfriends. They are all out in the shed. When they start to whine and beller, I either turn the ign switch or the gas valve off then, all is quite and all is well. Also, they are less maintenance.
 
I waited till 38 years old before I tried it the first time. It lasted 10 years and I can tell you I would never do it again. A female friend to have dinner with or go places with is fine, but I would find a widow at a local church who has some morals and make sure she know up front it is a friends only relationship, and nothing further. As much as it may seem like the right thing to do, I would advise against it at your age. I think if a person would get married in early 20's and grow together may work, but at your age, you would both be set in your ways and believe it or not, they may not mind "your ways" till you say "I do" then your ways will not be tolerated any longer. If you want to be unhappy, then go ahead, but I recommend a nice lady to go eat and travel companion and leave it at that.
 
I was 'late' in getting married. I would say a difficult thing was thinking in terms of 'we' instead of me. Like I would plan what 'I' wanted to do the coming weekend, then tell her ! Took me a long time to figure out I had to think as 'we'. (during the 2nd marriage)
 
I just don't know how the heck you have waited this long?? I made the best move of my life when I was 21 , and married my sweetheart. We have been through a lot in the last 32 years,But I would do it again in a heart beat. May be that some folks are just too ornery to get along with a wife or husband , but don't let that scare you off. Just remember, life is a two way street, and both people have to be happy now and then. No one is perfect, we all have faults, and my lovely wife over looks mine. All the best, in whatever you do. Just don't take all your advice from guys whom have fail relationships. Girls can be nice people too.Bruce
 
(quoted from post at 10:51:29 05/09/15) Farming the 160 that I grew up on, and also have a full-time job. I've enjoyed my independence, but now that I'm getting into my "mature" years I'm beginning to wonder if having a wife might be a good idea.

But I am also wondering if a guy like me who has lived alone most of his life would make a decent husband.
Would married life for a lifetime bachelor be ok, or a disaster?

I'm not in a relationship now with anyone. But I do have one "dependent", and that's my Chihuahua dog. And she's definitely the "first thing" in my life, so I hope any (potential) future wife would be ok with that!

Advice?

Regular wedding or Shotgun ?
 
Just remember, "no matter how good looking and wonderful she may seem, somewhere there's a guy who couldn't wait to get rid of her."
 
Choose wisely, It will be the biggest decision that you will ever make. You could have thirty years ahead of you. She will contribute ninety percent of your happiness or ninety percent of your problems. I could not imagine not having my wife to share the rest of my life with.
 
1) She has to have more money than you both can spend.
2) Show her last 3 years income tax returns
3) A credit report

And the most important get a car fax report...

I am a mechanic and not taking up with her so I can work on her car...

I would want to know the same things a Bank would want to know on a loan... I am not taking anyone's word for it... ...prove it...

It should work both ways...
 
Well, if you ever happen to run across another nice one, let me know. All the ones I have run across are related to the Wicked Witch of the East.
 
JerryS--Your post was so good and concise I felt I had to respond to it.

I'm not looking for kids or a younger woman. I think it was anthropologist Margaret Mead who remarked that people actually get married 3 times in their lives: the first time is for "romance", the second time is for children, and the third time is for companionship. I'm wise enough to realize I am past the first two, so I would say I'm looking for the "third one".

Why I never got married? I guess I've always been pretty self-sufficient emotionally, and also resisted the pressure that my generation was exposed to get married. Plus I had to take care of my dad into his later years (he died in 2002) and that probably was a reason. Also the later boomers like myself seem to not have jumped on the marriage wagon as much as earlier generations. I was thinking the other day that a lot of the men in my high school graduating class never got married.
 
You might not need one, but they sure come in handy for cooking and keeping the house clean. I don't know how to cook and can't keep the house clean because I work all the time.
 
If you're having to ask a bunch of old farts on a tractor forum then evidently you haven't met the right woman.
 
(quoted from post at 15:59:59 05/09/15) as long as shes done cycling go for it if not id say no
would venture to say the "cycling" is the most important thing in a marriage or with having a girl friend.
Without it you're just room mates,...no fun in that.
 
The things you may think about now, you probably didn't think about when you were half that age.
 

I understand the part about looking after a parent... I would not put that on another woman I don't know how my desist wife put up with my mom and I would not put that on someone else...
 
i married the first time at age 34 she passed away when i was 48.
i married the 2nd time at age 55. the biggest problem has been her kids.
she won't make them stand on their own. i sometimes think they are 5 years old.
 
now that's funny ,, I don't care who you are ,, that's funny ,,. LOL,.. but the bible says it is not good for man to live alone ,, but it is worse than livin in the attic with a bad woman , my uncle wife passed away when he was 88 , he got married to a ursala the sea witch at age 90 ,.. she was 78 ,,. we all knew it was no good ,, but he was lonely ,,.and thought she would make him happy ,,. that witch went thru everything that had any attachment to my beloved late aunt and threw it out on the curb ...then she started in on shapin my uncle up ,. ,,. somehow he managed to live to 102 ,,. could be because she kept him always alittle out of sorts
 
I respect and admire your independence. Too many of us live our lives simply following the herd.
 
Well, if nothing else, you sure do know how to ask a loaded question! There are so many angles to consider nowadays. First, if you have never been married, then as some have mentioned, you may be pretty set in your ways, even more than you realize. I feel that women seek companionship even more than men, but they also seek money, and other material things. I tried to teach my three kids the proper values in life. My son's first wife was Canadian and was just looking for a way to stay in the States. We tried to tell him. His second wife had three kids and as soon as the youngest finished high school, she was gone. Well, they aren't divorced yet, but she decided she wanted to become a truck driver at about 42 years of age. She hasn't been home for two years now. My oldest daughter is on her third marriage. My youngest daughter is 42, was engaged years ago, but he got cold feet, she says she is too set in her ways to get married, although I can tell she is lonely at times. My wife died at 62, five years ago, after 44 years of marriage. I get terribly lonely at times, but at 76 years old, I just can't see myself asking another woman to put up with what may be just around the bend, because one never knows when they may need constant care. Besides, the way today's society is, you can never be sure of their motives. I can well understand your feelings. Before I married, I had two other rather serious relationships, but I just never did hit it off with their parents, and believe me, being able to get along with your in-laws is very important. At your age, you may meet a woman whose parents are still alive,but would be older and you never know when something will happen. This is something to consider also, as you well know, parents often need help from different sources, and if they should be in a care facility, there would be the scheduling of visits and often other help. There are just so many things to consider. I will not say that someday you will or will not find a woman that you will be happy with, but I do feel that the older you get, the more complicated things can be. And, for the same reason, DO NOT rush into a marriage! You can THINK you know someone, until they say "I do", and then find out "they won't". I feel that all the previous comments pretty well covered everything, but just wanted to add my quarters worth. (I know, it used to be two cents worth, but ya gotta allow for inflation.) LOL
 
You're never too old to try something new. Look at Bruce Jenner, he's 65.

I'd say go one step at a time. Maybe you don't need a wife, but you might need a companion. Be careful about who you get involved with; there are plenty of grifters out there who prey on older folks. Before you get seriously involved with someone you haven't known for a long time, check her out. There are background check sites like beenverified.com that can tell you if something is fishy with a person.
 
All I can say is if you accidently find the right woman you will know without having to ask. And you will never find her if you are out looking. I was 33 and had given up hope of ever finding a girl friend when I met her and we were married less than 6 months later. Just lost her this past march after 37 years. She was 64 and I am 71. I know she would not want me to be setting alone the rest of my days if I do find anouther great girl.
 
"I'm not in a relationship now with anyone"

Then what in the world, and why in the world would you be asking about getting married?

There was an episode of Andy Griffith where this fella came to town, a farmer played by Alan Hale (Skipper from Gilligan's Island), and he too decided that he had been alone long enough, and now was time to purchase a new tractor, er wife, So, he shows up in Maybury, standing on the street corner and literally lifting women up off of the ground as they walked by, sizing them up to become his new tractor, er bride. I'm not exactly sure how the episode ended, but I know that he left, abandoned her, purchased a boat and hired a first mate, and got marooned on some island somewhere with a movie star, farmer's daughter, professor, and a wealthy couple. NOW HERE IS WHAT YOU NEED TO LEARN FROM ALL OF THIS...he was so turned off and burned by the woman that Barney Fife, Otis Campbell, and Andy Griffith hitched him up to at his "advanced age", that even when marooned on a desert island somewhere in the Pacific with two hot chicks, he preferred to sleep with Gilligan, which I always found strange. Getting married at an "advanced age" and having it not turn out well, turned that farmer into a fruit loop, although in the closet, er hut fruity loopy as they did it back then. He moved all the way from South Carolina to San Francisco, purchased a boat, and ended up living the rest of his life with his significant other first mate in a grass hut, instead of with two hot chicks or cheating with the wealthy lady when her husband wasn't looking.

My point? Don't do it. If it aint brokeback, don't do it.

Mark
 
(quoted from post at 07:24:48 05/10/15) "I'm not in a relationship now with anyone"

Then what in the world, and why in the world would you be asking about getting married?

There was an episode of Andy Griffith where this fella came to town, a farmer played by Alan Hale (Skipper from Gilligan's Island), and he too decided that he had been alone long enough, and now was time to purchase a new tractor, er wife, So, he shows up in Maybury, standing on the street corner and literally lifting women up off of the ground as they walked by, sizing them up to become his new tractor, er bride. I'm not exactly sure how the episode ended, but I know that he left, abandoned her, purchased a boat and hired a first mate, and got marooned on some island somewhere with a movie star, farmer's daughter, professor, and a wealthy couple. NOW HERE IS WHAT YOU NEED TO LEARN FROM ALL OF THIS...he was so turned off and burned by the woman that Barney Fife, Otis Campbell, and Andy Griffith hitched him up to at his "advanced age", that even when marooned on a desert island somewhere in the Pacific with two hot chicks, he preferred to sleep with Gilligan, which I always found strange. Getting married at an "advanced age" and having it not turn out well, turned that farmer into a fruit loop, although in the closet, er hut fruity loopy as they did it back then. He moved all the way from South Carolina to San Francisco, purchased a boat, and ended up living the rest of his life with his significant other first mate in a grass hut, instead of with two hot chicks or cheating with the wealthy lady when her husband wasn't looking.

My point? Don't do it. If it aint brokeback, don't do it.

Mark

Brokeback???? :)
 
I read your post twice and still can't make heads or tails out of it.
I have watched maybe 3 episodes of Andy Griffith program in my life and about the same number of Gilligan's Island.
I was about 7 when Andy first showed and 11 when Gilligan came on and thought it was silly and a waste of time even then. So I guess any wisdom that might have come from those series has escaped me.
But what do your references to broke back Mtn, San Francisco and who slept with Gilligan (yes I understand your implications) have to do with a guy who might be thinking about taking a wife at 60?
 
The woman will decide if you are husband material. If you find some one that you can trust and respect enough that you will always treat her in that manner, then you are husband material. You will need to determine if she is the one you can trust and respect enough that you want her to be with you.

Don't look for some one you can live with, but someone that you can not live without.

SDE
 
Go for it I got married for the first time at 55 wife was 56 first for her too met on a dating site hardest part for us was combining two household to one.
.
 

My wife of 37 years has two long haired chihuahuas and they do come first .... or else. Let me show you what that chihuahua is going to become, if you bring "someone" else into the house.


 
I got married at 19, then again at 29. I can tell you, it will be either the best or worst experience in your life. Don't settle. The dog shouldn't have to be #1, because you should never have to choose.
 
Three things I have learned.

1) They ain't like wine....they don't get better with age.

2) That quiet and cuddly little kitten....will grow into a roaring lion!

3) They have an opinion on everything...whether based on experience or not
...and you are going to hear it.
 
agree with the other posters that you usually find the
best women when you aren't 'looking'.

Marriage...that's easy.
if you are with someone and have to ask yourself if you should get married...........don't.
If you can't imagine any scenario of life without this
woman at your side.....marry her.
 

We sell tractor parts! We have the parts you need to repair your tractor - the right parts. Our low prices and years of research make us your best choice when you need parts. Shop Online Today.

Back
Top