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Coffee Shop
Where I grew up
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<blockquote data-quote="Ky hills" data-source="post: 1705282" data-attributes="member: 24816"><p>Amazing to me how different the lay of the land can be. I wouldn't know how act on that much flat land. Here we may have a couple acres here and there that's somewhat level up on a ridge or down in a holler. </p><p>When I was a child, before the round hat rollers got popular here, it was all done in little bales. ( My dads little bales weren't too little they'ed about gut anybody trying to handle them.)</p><p>They would keep cattle off one side of the farm till after the hay was cut. They baled hillsides and all. It was a chore getting hay in the wagons and keeping it there going on the hills. Coming over some steep places they would have a tractor behind chained to the wagon to help keep the load from pushing the tractor pulling the wagon over the hill.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ky hills, post: 1705282, member: 24816"] Amazing to me how different the lay of the land can be. I wouldn’t know how act on that much flat land. Here we may have a couple acres here and there that’s somewhat level up on a ridge or down in a holler. When I was a child, before the round hat rollers got popular here, it was all done in little bales. ( My dads little bales weren’t too little they’ed about gut anybody trying to handle them.) They would keep cattle off one side of the farm till after the hay was cut. They baled hillsides and all. It was a chore getting hay in the wagons and keeping it there going on the hills. Coming over some steep places they would have a tractor behind chained to the wagon to help keep the load from pushing the tractor pulling the wagon over the hill. [/QUOTE]
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