Good fences make good neighbors. We had a neighbor that we struggled with on the shared fence rule. His half fell into our corn field and for the most part we did the majority of maintenance. We had about a mile of fence along the railroad and at that time the RR maintained the entire stretch. A wind storm and downed trees one night gave us a quick lesson in Train v. Cow physics. After that the cows were skiddish when ever they heard the train. 1988 the lake got low enough that we had to run more fence into the lake bottom to prevent escape. We had a few that actually calved in the willows that were typically at waters edge. And finally nothing beats a good dog. The old Shepard we had had control of his kingdom and the cows knew it. It wasn't uncommon to leaves gates open when we were haying or filling silo and repeatedly going through. Dad would talk German to him and he was invaluable when cows were out. He would retrieve the cows form the back pasture on his own and could send a salesman packing with his polite smile
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Today's Featured Article - History of the Nuffield Tractor - by Anthony West. The Nuffield tractor story started in early 1945. The British government still reeling from the effects of the war on the economy, approached the Nuffield organization to see if they would design and build an "ALL NEW" British built wheeled tractor, suitable for both British and world farming.
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