Friday, October 26, 2012

Cotton Harvest 2012


We are off and running. Typical cotton harvest. The first day or two we are getting the kinks out of the equipment.
   No matter how much we service and prepare the equipment, there are always things you cannot anticipate. Today and five cent cotter pin wore out down inside the shifter linkage---and there went an hour. Arrrgh.
   Of course, the week started off with rain. So, now we are a day behind. Rain happens. The weird thing is yesterday morning as I was checking the fields, I looked up and there was a rainbow over the coast range. No forecast of rain, but there was a beautiful rainbow.
   I look forward to seeing the awesome Fall sunsets. But, after thirty years of picking cotton, I have never seen a rainbow without rain.

   The cotton does look good.
But, there's a famous saying about chickens and eggs. We are only coming up on the halfway mark. There is still a long way to go. 


Counting Chickens…
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright October 2012
                Right now we are watching and waiting for the cotton to open up. This time of year, my banker will ask what our yields are going to be. My father –in-law will ask what our yields are going to be. It is easy to start doing back of the envelope calculations trying to figure out how we are going to land this year.
            There is a famous saying about not counting your chickens before they hatch. Things look good so far, but until I get the last bale picked and ginned I won’t know how the year looks.
            Years ago I had a field that was picture perfect. The cotton was open all the way to the top, all the way across the field- it picked 1006 pounds per acre. A few years later I had a ratty looking Pima cotton field. The neighbors teased me, the banker asked what the fiddle happened to the field, my father-in-law shook his head. That field picked over 1800 pounds per acre. You couldn’t tell by looking.
So,  it’s just another reason you have to build up patience on the farm. You just gotta sit and keep from counting those chickens, or gotten bolls before they hatch.

I hope Y'all have a great week.

P

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Cotton Picking Has Begun!

We are off and running---like a heard of turtles.
   First day hiccups included an ignition switch that killed the picker on the road as we moved from one field to another. That was an hour and a half delay before we picked out first boll of cotton. Then there were the usual opening day disasters: a faulty power take off switch and air in the grease lines. But, we seem to have the kinks worked out---for the moment.
   Pictures can be deceiving. This cotton looks OK, but this field didn't even make two bales per acre. Not good. Fortunately, where we are picking now is doing much better.
   Of course, the next curve ball will be the weather. The first winter storm of the season is due the beginning of the week. Fortunately after that passes the weather man says things will clear up for a bit.

One of this week's radio bits is appropriate for this time of year-


The Loneliness of the Tractor Driver, Isn’t All That Bad
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright October 2012

                There was an old book about the loneliness of the long distance runner. There is a parallel in farming- the loneliness of the tractor driver. At least that used to be true. My first summer up here I spent on the back of a D-8 Caterpillar- no air conditioning, no radio, no cell phone- I just spent a lot of time with my self, out in the field. And there is nothing wrong with that. It was kind of cool. I had just graduated college and it gave me a lot of time to process things. I don’t know about you but being in school can be a lot like drinking from a fire hose because I am a slow learner. The air conditioner is a lot more comfortable, a radio can be entertaining, and today we have cell phones so we can stay in touch with everyone.
            But, there is something to be said for those long days sitting on the tractor just thinking. Of course, there is that old saying, “Sometimes I sits and thinks, and sometimes I just thinks.” Life these days can get kinda busy. Sometimes sitting on a tractor working a field is a good way to spend a day and get a chance to unwind things. 


I hope Y'all have a fabulous week.

I'm off to pick some cotton.

P

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Almost Time to Pick Cotton

   As you can see, it's almost time to pick cotton. Another week and we'll fire up the beasts and start picking.  The equipment is almost ready. We are busy with all the last minute details. We'll finish repairs and servicing this week.

   It's been a strange weather week. It cooled down and there was even a little rain. It's warming back up.


Another Death of Common Sense Experience
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright October 2012
                In the interest of saving the environment I had to drive one of the ranch trucks an hour out of the way for a smog check. The reason for this was some computer in Sacramento said the shop where the truck had been tested multiple times before was not good enough this time.
            Can you understand why we get a little crabby about the nonsense that goes on out here?
On one hand the enviros want me to lower my carbon footprint by cutting back miles driven- then they make me drive an hour out of the way. Maybe in town there is a smog shop every other block, but that ain’t the way it is out here in the country. 
This is just another ‘death of common sense’ experience. I am all for clean air, just like the rest of you. I live here, I raised my family here. But, if we are going to do this-let’s do it right. Driving an hour out of the way for a smog test isn’t even close to doing it right.
For the record, the truck passed with flying colors.

There have been some changes at the radio station. We are now ESPN sports news, but they still want to hear from this farmer so you can find me at-


I hope Y'all have a great week.

P

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Homemade Tools

Another busy week on the farm. The weather finally cooled off. You know it's been hot when 81 feels cool. 
The pickers are almost ready. We have two weeks until harvest, so we have some wiggle room. Next week we have to clean and service the tractors and the module builders.

Homemade Tools
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright October 2012
                My favorite Clint Eastwood movie is Heartbreak Ridge. As Gunnery Sgt. Tom Highway Clint teaches his Recon unit to “Adapt, Innovate and Overcome.”
            That’s a great slogan for farming too-“Adapt, Innovate and Overcome.”
            One place we adapt and innovate is in the shop. The other day I made a tool for Ruben to use on the cotton picker. It wasn't anything big. We needed a wrench with a little more reach.  So I welded an extension for him.
            I have custom also made some other tools. I made a bearing extractor for our cultivator. That beat beating old bearings out with a sledge hammer. I also made a gig to trim shear bolts for the ripper.
            Sheryl asked why I didn't manufacture tools like this for other farmers. I told her there wouldn't be a market. These are things any farmer could make in his own shop. We Adapt, We Innovate and We Overcome.
            Farmers can be short of money, or time, or water, but we are never short of challenges. We can adapt and innovate in many ways. This is just one example. The goal is the same; We adapt and innovate so we can survive, so we can overcome.

I hope Y'all have a great week.

P

Monday, October 1, 2012

Defoliation!

Sorry I didn't have a post for you this past weekend. I was busy editing.
Here you go-
That is what we have been waiting for. Pretty isn't it?
     We started defoliating last week. It has been so hot we have had to cut back on material so we didn't burn the bolls shut. The warm weather does move things along though. My first few winters here we had already had two inches of rain and the temps were done in the 70's. This is better cotton weather. That being said I am waiting for things to cool off. It has been hot enough for long enough.

      In the Fall we also fertilize and irrigate the almond trees. This time of year they are getting ready to go dormant, so they are storing food. We put in some fertilizer now so they have food when they wake up in the Spring. The almonds also actually are putting out new growth right now and those are the fruiting spurs where next year' almonds will grow. So it is really important to keep the trees well watered.


The Satisfaction of Harvest
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright September, 2012

                You have heard me whimper and whine about a lot of farming and how tough it is. Sorry about that. This morning I want to talk about the satisfaction of farming. There is nothing like bringing in a good harvest: seeing the picker fill up p with cotton, seeing the wheat pouring into the trucks, seeing the almonds being swept up and shipped off. The satisfaction of a productive year’s work. That’s good stuff.
            Unlike many people farmers don’t see the daily result of their work. Right now we are waiting to see how this year’s cotton crop will turn out. We started working the ground last Fall. We planted in April. We have been tending the fields all summer, but we won’t know how it will turn out until next month.
            But, all that waiting has a payoff. I love Fall weather. It’s cool and crisp after the oven heat of the summer. And then we fire up the pickers and head into the field.
We still have work to do and bills to pay. But, there is a real sense of satisfaction seeing how the year’s work turned out.
http://www.940kyno.com/index.php?c=68

I hope Y'all have a great week.

P