We got the
tractor worked into the deal, and it sat under a beautiful, giant oak tree,
snuggled under a tarp, all winter. The
image on the fender of a heroic eagle with a flaming pitchfork evoked the era
of its manufacture, and reminded us that, with its revolutionary 3-point hitch,
this machine had once been the essential workhorse of any Midwestern farm. The seller had given us a briefing back in
October and we had each taken a practice lap around the field. Yet looking out at that tractor all winter, I
couldn’t help but feel anxiety about the pasture. Would my husband enjoy driving the old beast? Would he want to come home from a 40-50 hour
workweek and spend his free time dragging a Brush Hog around the property in
the blazing sun? Would the noise, the
dirt, the grease, and the smells bring him the joy of rural life or the burden
of it? I already knew from my own
childhood that mowing an acreage was not my favorite summer pastime, but I
hoped he might like it.
On the flip
side, even as I considered the possibility we might want to trade our working
museum piece in for a modern, wide-bladed mower, I couldn’t help hoping that
old tool would become the centerpiece of a new way of life for us. It might pull a wagon around for
hayrides. It might run a tiller for the
enormous garden. It might drag tree trunks
to the woodpile. I imagined all the
possibilities its heroic eagle evoked, and knew this machine was so much more versatile
than any modern mower would be. Who
knows, maybe even I might find myself enjoying the work, when it was on my own
property?
Getting her ready for the maiden voyage. |
Last week
the grass was tall enough; it was time to move from anxious hope to
reality. Sure enough, the old engine
started easily, and after airing up the tires and checking the oil, we fired up
the brush hog. My husband quickly found himself
at ease at the controls, and mowed down the first section of pasture in short
order. With a big grin on his face, he
crossed the creek and began to mow the front section, finding himself completely
confident going up and down the hills and around the trees. Our vision was actually coming true! I was elated, and I am pretty sure he was,
too. Our stress melted away and
jubilation replaced it.
Who smiles when they're mowing? That's my husband. Living the dream. |
He waved as
I passed him on my way out to pick up a kid and our grins matched. It was, however, a different story, ten short
minutes later, when I got back. The
tractor was backed into a brush pile at the edge of the creek, and my husband
was leaning over to one side and the other, fidgeting with the controls. He eventually came in to report that
something in the drive had snapped, and the tractor had freewheeled, backward, down the hill. Because the breaks only nominally work, it
was only my husband’s lightning reflexes that had allowed him to steer the
thing into a cushion of brush, instead of coming to a hard, possibly
limb-threatening, stop by hitting a tree or landing in the creek.
Now, aside
from praising the Lord for my husband’s safe landing, we’re back to square
one. While a clutch assembly is a mere
$150, installing it requires splitting the whole machine in half then putting it back
together. My dad did that once to his
old Case when I was a kid – he winched the front end up to a tree to do
it. We’re not so mechanically adventurous
as my dad. Plus, the thing is disabled,
on the far side of the pasture, on the wrong side of the creek. We may have to rent another tractor, just to
drag it out of there!
Check out that emblem on the fender. Awesome. |
All logic
tells me that investing in a newer model mower with the widest cutting deck we can
afford is our best option, but the sweetness of nostalgia for the old ways, for
the possibilities, and the ambition wrought by the image of a pitchfork wielding
eagle make it hard to give up on our old 9N.
Remember the days of old; consider the
generations long past. Ask your father and he will tell you. Deuteronomy 32:7
Oh EmmyJean, my heart just breaks for you and all the that the old beast came to signify to you both. I share in your emotional roller coaster here, delighting in the beautiful images of your sweet guy riding around with a happy grin on his face, and the sadness that you felt when she broke. I feel for you...I really do!
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