Family
Everyone Gettin Busy
A short update here this morning.
I would say based on the comments over the weekend that about a third of the farmers in the area are about to head to the field today to start shelling some corn. Early corn is anywhere from 15 to 20 and everywhere in between.
It is also the first day of school for the kids around Benton. So some added excitement (not for the Robertson kids) to add to everything else going on.
I hope to replace this update with something more substantial later…………..
Combine Cleaning
Of all the farm jobs, the one I hate the most is greasing the combine. Its not the maintenance I hate, its the fact that there is no way in the world to perform the maintenance or repairs on a combine without getting filthy. Combines are dirt magnets. Not just dirt magnets, but the most powerful dirt magnet in the world. Dirt will accumulate out of no where and to a depth that seems impossible for such a short time of use. It’s the kind of dirt will cause you to itch like crazy.
This dirt is also dangerous. It can catch fire and burn if it is an area that gets hot. Especially if it accumulates in those areas. So besides being a nuisance, dirt and dust are also a fire danger.

Matthew is becoming the official combine operator. Note the word operator, not driver. My new motto is that if you drive it, you clean it. If Matthew will clean it, I will repair and perform maintenance on the clean equipment. Fair enough exchange I think. Besides, Matthew loves to use the power washer and he doesn’t mind getting wet and dirty in the process.
So Matthew washes today and tomorrow and then we hook up the corn head and wash it. Then I will begin the process of performing maintenance and greasing the head and box while Matthew cleans up the cab. By the time this operation is done, we should be ready to get grain bins in order and set augers for corn harvest.
Then we wait. Wait for the corn to dry down. I suspect that we will be shelling corn by the first of September.
Ahh, shelling corn, my second favorite thing to do on the farm. Second only after side-dressing corn with nitrogen. Funny you get to do the second favorite thing after doing the first hated thing.
Wheat, Beans and Fertilizer
Well the Russian drought has caused all kinds of panic in the wheat markets that have pulled the corn and bean markets along with them. However the basis has widened each day so the flat price has stayed the same. But that has not deterred people from jumping back on the wheat band wagon. Seed is getting scarce around here.
People dont understand how something like the Russians can cause the wheat price in Illinois to go up. Hey folks, we are all connected now. As Disney says so well, Its a small, small world!
I got jury duty over with yesterday evening late and spent today trying to get back the three days I lost to my civic duty. I made some progress with a computer project started and near finished, got the sprayer out and got two loads of weed killer down on the double crop beans, two more to go, and got the wheat sampled to send off for a germ test.
Well it was a good start, anyway. I think that got me only three and a half days behind instead of four……….
I have got to get with my trucker and get some lime ordered. Soil test show that I need to spread some lime this fall. I hope it is dry enough to get the job done this year. I have also got my N, P and K fertilizer ordered for the wheat ground that I intend to plant. Prices on inputs are creeping up at a fair pace around here right now.
Tomorrow I hope to finish up the last two loads of spraying so we can put that to bed for the year. Then its off to the Surgeon to see about my shoulder……….not something I am looking forward to by the way. After that I need to spend some time on the phone, lime spreader to contact, seed cleaner to contact, seed treater to contact and last but not least is to get ready for Saturday.
Saturday is, I was informed today, yard day here at Robertson World Wide Headquarters. Which is necessary, it’s time for more than just a mowing………but not something I am looking forward to. However she who must be obeyed has spoken. I am wondering who will figure out how to sneak off first, me or the kids.
Are you a Gun Nut?
While watching my screen saver the other day, which is just family pictures and guns, Trooper John noted that he was worried about me. Scared that I might be a “gun nut”.
Well……
While at Physical Therapy the other day I picked up a copy of Field and Stream, not something I usually do, not that I don’t like Field and Stream, its just not on my list of normal reading. It seems to me to be geared to the yuppie crowd of outdoor hunters and fishermen. That’s just my opinion.
They had a short article in that issue of how to know if you’re a gun nut. It’s pretty good but a bit yuppie for me. Anyway, I adapted the list to fit my own criteria of how you know you’re a gun nut.
You know you’re a gun nut when:* You go to a gun show and you’re afraid you will see an old gun you owned and bust into tears * Hulls and brass on the ground are money to you, not litter. You pick them up even if they are not a caliber you own. * You miss your old hunting dog more than you miss your old school friends * There are only two things that are more fun than a good argument about knock down power or cartridges, and they are both not legal. * There are three men’s hands you would like to shake but cant: John Moses Browning, Charlton Heston and Gunny Sgt Carlos Hathcock. * You wonder why there is nobody like Elmer Keith anymore. * Quigley Down Under is the most awesome gun movie ever made * Used guns are a fine thing: They have a past. They are often good deals and someone has already put the first scratch on them. * You are old enough to remember when you were a kid you took your guns to school and it was considered normal. * You wonder if your grandkids will take as good a care of your guns when your gone as you have taken care of your grandpa’s guns. * Whenever you stop at any gun store, you always buy a box of ammo even if you don’t need it, “just in-case”. * When someone tells you you’re missing a target, you nod politely. If they tell you why you’re missing, you listen carefully. * You try Herb Parson style shots when nobody is looking, with your favorite shotgun. * Guns can’t love you back, but they never complain either. * You never have too many guns!
Ok Trooper John, you got me…………..I am a Gun Nut!
The Sweet Corn is Ready!
Picking sweet corn today……………between meetings and physical therapy.
Morgan was a big help as always!
Cooked some on the grill over the weekend and it was GREAT! Let it soak in water for 3 to 4 hours in the shuck and then grill for about 30 min turning it every so often until the shucks are staring to burn and the corn is done. GREAT!
Morgan
Took this picture of Morgan the other day during wheat harvest. She brought out some bacon sandwiches and tea to the field in the Mule. She is always so pleasant and has the sweetest disposition with that smile on her face.
I tell her that she is my favorite daughter. She reminds me that she is my only daughter………..I still tell her that shes my favorite youngest child. She reminds me that its only her and Matthew.
We roll along…..the end is in sight!
Day 5 of winter wheat/canola harvest continues. First was son Matthew becoming a wheat cutter and now expert combine operator at harvesting standing canola. There is a word for standing canola, but I cant remember it right now. He has mastered the art of it at the age of 12. I am proud.

Next was my wife Lori learning how to run the tractor and autosteer and drilling beans yesterday. She kept the drill going all day and got us in good position to get it caught up with the combine today.
The field of canola we are in now is Hornet and is making pretty good, maybe even better than the best field of Citro. Would like to get it done today while I have a trucker still available. Will loose him for a few days starting tomorrow.
Anyway here are two videos I shot yesterday, one of me using the autosteer while drilling beans and the other of Mrs Lori making a pass in the field drilling herself. Sorry for no fancy editing, not enough time last night to get it done. And yes to my friends, I listen to NPR while drilling beans, it keeps me from going postal during the day. Something about the mellow tone and sounds, they relax me!
Canola Harvest 2010
Well we got started yesterday on our Canola. Got 35 acres cut and ready to ship. We will be moving fields today and weighting some to calibrate the yield monitor and such.

Setting the combine was fun as I have never cut canola before so it was difficult to say the least. David Hale came up and took part of his Sunday afternoon to ride a few rounds and give me some pointers on harvesting and setting the combine.

Three words will best describe today: HOT, dusty and tired. But we move forward!



Wheat Harvest Today
We harvested wheat today. Wanted to cut canola but no truckers until tomorrow and Monday so we cut the wheat and went to the bin with it. It rained a bit just as we finished up for the night, but I couldn’t pour any out of the gauge when we got home so there is hope for tomorrow. Have to change things over to canola and then try it and see what happens.
Matthew, my 12yr old, did 99% of the combining and he did a fantastic job. He is a pro, need to get him on a custom crew out west and make dad a little money!!! He does a fine job operating and he got more confident as the day went on.
Morgan provided transportation via the Mule back and forth from the field to the bins and shop for me and even brought out a picnic dinner for me and her to share under a shade tree while we waited on Matthew to load the truck. haven’t down loaded those pictures yet, but I will.
Anyway here are some pictures of today taken by the proud mother, Lori.


Weekend of distruction or weekend of clean up?
We spent the weekend tearing down an old barn on the farm. I was surprised how fast the work went for the most part. Needless to say that we were all tired and sore afterwards. Lots of nails to pull, barn tin to pull and old rough cut lumber to save.
But between the Cat and the backhoe, it was short work getting it down and cleaned up. Now just to take the concrete up and use it to make a dry water crossing from one field to another.
Technology: Its a death march!
I saw a poster once. One of those De-motivational posters, I think, that said something like the road of technology is like a marathon with no finish line. Well, I think it is more like a death march: Some people can endure to the end, others fall out along the way.
Three things cause me to say this, so let me explain:
Why are there less farmers? Because of technology. Pure and simple. We don’t need a farm or farmer every section when we have technology to make up for boots on the ground: Tractors replaced horses. Hybrid seed replaced open polinated. Herbicides replaced cultivation. GPS replaced markers. I could go on, but you get the idea.
The work that one man can do and the quanity of crops he can produce on the same land that once occupied several farmers, is amazing. And his production capacity is growing by the year. Grow with technology or die.
Adapt to new technology or die! Not a nice thought, but accurate. I was at a meeting the other night and a man at the meeting said that he didn’t want or need to be a farmer after he saw the 37 acres farmed across the road from his house last week. I thought he was talking about maybe organic, or not liking chemicals, or something but he wasn’t. “You know, there were 5 different big four wheel drive tractors in that field before they planted it. They killed that ground. And the cost…how could they make money? I don’t know what they were thinking.”
What he was saying is that they might have had big iron, but they were not using the latest technology or techniques to farm the field. Technology is going to be used by your neighbors so you had better be using it too. If not, then be ready to be passed up and passed over. All of us have access to the same technology. GMO traits, GPS, consulting, tillage techniques, soil management techniques, etc..
Same in the consulting world. GPS should be standard with your practices. Email, text messages, electronic downloads and file transfer. Just because you think using it makes you look like your competition instead of unique is stupid. Yes, your unique. Your uniquely useless.
Keeping up takes time! Time is money. Time is valuable. Time is something we can’t make. And time will pass you by if your not making time to keep up with changes in technology. The most successful people in the world, not necessarily the richest, but most successful, spend an average of two hours a day reading materials not directly related to their occupation. They are keeping up with the rest of the world and are able to anticipate changes in their field before they happen, because they have their fingers on the pulse of new technology. Work smarter, not harder.
I try to spend two hours a day reading, surfing, blogging and listening to things not related to Ag. The results have been enlightening. I have tried to get my friends and colleagues to do the same, but they often spout the same old refusal recital: I don’t have time, I am too busy. MAKE TIME. Make time to get away from what you do so that you can see the forest for the trees. You can see the big picture andyou are not judging the world from your back door or front window.
I have had cause to think about technology the last few days. How I am not using it, how I am using it and how I should be using it. My crooked rows on my first field of corn show me that I should have been thinking all along about my auto-steer in the sprayer being in the planting tractor as well. My accounting software shows me where the money goes and for what. It keeps track of profit and loss. It tells me if I am a healthy operation or not. And my management practices show me that if I implement the latest technology that I am not seen as an outdated farmer or someone who is not “with the times” but rather as a forward thinker who is ahead of the herd.
Technology is a death march: how are you enduring?
First Welding Lesson
Matthew got his first welding lesson on Sunday afternoon.
Between myself and his Great Grandpa he got a lot of advice that I am not sure he understood completely. But he did weld and weld well for his first attempt. He welded good enough to weld the metal bracket on his go cart for the throttle control.
He also got some experience welding with the stick welder and the wire welder………
Good job Matthew!
Tracks
We have a field road between our house and my Grandpa and Grandmas house. It more of a field lane than anything. The kids call it the dusty road. Well after the rains its a muddy road.
I like to walk up and down it after a rain and see what kind of critters are making their way across the farm. Yesterday I had to run home to get something so I took the ATV down the muddy road and found all kinds of tracks to identify.
Here is a sample of what I found……………..
And last but not least of which was this sitting near a wash out on the edge of the field road………….
























