This Week In Ag #160
No profession embraces its nostalgic past like farming. Antique tractors. Old red barns. Burlap sacks. These are prized relics of farming’s past, still cherished today. But few relics symbolize the bridge between farming’s past and present quite like the pocket notebook.
Long before the use of satellite imagery, electronic sensors, mapping software and apps, there was the pocket notebook. It was as essential to planting season as the seed itself. Whether staple-bound on the side or spiral-bound at the top, the only prerequisite was that they fit easily in your shirt pocket. Every seed company gave them out as plentifully as they do hats.
Inside, they contained brief information about various seed products, a calendar, conversion charts, settings recommendations for planters and other useful formulas and info.
But make no mistake: their primary use was that of a field diary. That’s why each pocket guide featured plenty of blank pages.
Farmers used them to record and track the products they planted and used in each field. Often, multiple hybrids/varieties are planted in a field. They could be recorded, such as “3417 on north 40, 3394 on the next 40, 6560 in the south 40.” You might even find crude renderings of a field map, complete with waterways, with lines drawn (that’s what mine looked like). You’d also record dates, planting rates and soil conditions. Along with seed, you’d document what/when crop protection and fertilizer products were applied.
You’d carry the pocket guide when you scouted crops, taking notes throughout the season. You noted pest and weed pressure and observations about crop conditions. And you always recorded rainfall. During harvest, you’d make crop observations (remember, this was well before yield monitors) about the condition of the crop, escaped weeds and record yields.
You could tell a lot about a farmer from his pocket notebook. It essentially was his personal diary, his thought process and a window into his personality. That was certainly the case for my dad.
Over the weekend, I came across one of dad’s old pocket notebooks. It was from the early 1990s. On one spread, I noticed what looked like late-season corn evaluations. He must have done some hand checks to estimate yields. It appears he was in the process of ordering seed for the next season (in the Midwest, to get the best discounts, you often need to order next year’s seed before this year’s is harvested).
Dad’s evaluations of the corn hybrids were far from scientific. But it captures a perfect glimpse into his mindset. It was also the last year he ever planted Northup King!
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