How Great The Yield From A Fertile Field

Random musings from an old farmer about life, agriculture, and faith

Thursday, May 26, 2022

Coffee Trailer

 When Emily's coffee trailer Windy was destroyed in an accident, I offered my shop during the winter to build a new one.  In late January, Emily and Chris backed an old dilapidated trailer into the shop to start the rebuild process.  The old trailer she bought had sat out in the woods as a guys hunting camp.  It was thoroughly rotten and moldy.  They totally gutted it and rebuilt it from the trailer frame up, reusing only the steel frame and the aluminum siding.  I enjoyed watching the construction progress and was amazed at the amount of work that went into the transformation.  I can attest that there is a lot of sweat equity in the rebuild!


The interior being gutted.  Even all of the wood studs and floor joists were replaced.


Some days I think the Hartters spent more time working at the farm than I did!  I enjoyed having them around.  The demolition took a couple of weeks, and then the real work started.  There were a lot of late nights, and the project seemed to be behind schedule most of the time. As with all similar projects, you keep running into unexpected challenges.  And a lot of thought was put into every step.  By the end of the first week of May it was totally weather tight and almost finished.  It still needed some interior and exterior work, plus all the equipment installed, but they pulled it home to finish it there.  Emily has named this one Ebenezer.



When I get the chance, I need to go see the completed trailer in action.  And maybe sample the wares.

I have completed my first year as a senior citizen.  The old farmers wife made me a meal of fried alligator and seafood pasta for my birthday.  Jack helped her make a green poke cake because he was sure that grampa needed a birthday cake on his birthday.  

I finished planting on May 13, but some of the crop struggled to come up through the crust that formed, and the cool weather.  I hoed a couple fields of soybeans, and ended up over-planting a half rate in one of them.  Then we found a field of corn with low population and slow, spread out emergence.  I decided to tear it up and replant when I got a good weather window this week.  I hope I am truly finished now.

Son #1, the boys, and I spent a Saturday afternoon hiking around "Firefly Woods".  The Koch girls were excited to show us around their new property, and we spent a lot of time in the creek. The kids all wore boots, but every one of them ended up filled with water.  We looked for mushrooms, but didn't find any.  There is a lot of work that needs to be done there, but I look forward to more adventures there in the future. 

Then Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpeh and Shen, and called the name of it Ebenezer, saying, Hitherto hath the Lord helped us.             I Samuel 7:12




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