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The Rural Voice, 1991-09, Page 31hours of tinkering to make them run again. Brian, who wants to be the fifth generation to farm the Gross homestead, loves this part of the work. It occupies the winter months and slack periods of the summer. Finding parts is not a big problems, Gordon says. "Since the tractors we work with come from the late 1940s and 1950s period, there are still parts available." The men do their own cleaning of the machines and co-oper- ate with repainting them, which is done in the summer. One restoration in particular was a labour of love for Harold and involved a bit of detective work to find the tractor he wanted. In 1989, with a sizeable collection already in place, Harold decided he wanted to hunt down a tractor he'd used when he op- erated a threshing gang in the area between Auburn and Blyth. He'd sold the Case D Diesel 500 tractor 15 years earlier, but after two weeks of hunting he found it again. He first traced the tractor to a farmer in the Lucknow area but he had died and it had been auctioned off. The auctioneer was helpful, went hack in his records and found the tractor had been sold to a man near Tiverton. The auctioneer found the buyer address, but he'd sold it to a man at Neustadt. Harold went to visit the 70 -year- old owner, who was still using it. The gentleman admitted that the big, heavy tractor, which lacked power steering, was getting to be a bit much for him. Harold bought the machine for $1500 and only had to do a minor overhaul to get it working as good as new. Now repainted, he estimated last year the tractor might be worth the $4,600 he first paid for it back in 1954. Harold says the Case D was the se- cond tractor he'd used on his threshing gang — he started out with a Case LA Harold and Bernice Gross stand with their collection of tractors, including the first new tractor Harold bought in 1954. It's a economical hobby, he says. in 1947. Once the only way to bringing in the grain, Harold recalls getting into the business of operating a threshing gang in a round about way when he got married in 1947. The couple had bought the farm next door to the Gross homestead and a threshing machine came with it. So to pay the way, he started out thresh-ing neighbours grain at a cost of $5 or $5.50 an hour. By the time he finally gave in to the trend to combines in the mid -sixties, the cost had risen to a princely sum of $7 an hour. It meant that a farmer might pay $30-$35 to have the crop threshed, not including his own time. And not including the food served by the women of the community. "We had some great home -cooked meals and lots of pies," he recalls. The farm wife whose turn it was to host the threshing gang often got help from her immediate neighbours, and returned the favour for other farmers. There was more fun than work involved in threshing, Harold recalls. "It just seemed like threshing time was a time to get farmers together. I don't say we're still not friends, but we don't get together as much." Memories of those days come back for Harold as he looks at his old tractors, but these aren't just museum pieces. Gordon says his tractors still get regular work on the farm because they come in handy for moving wa- gons or raking hay, and they're a lot more convenient to get on and off because they don't have hydraulics in the way. However, the lack of power steering makes them heavier to use. When events like the Thresher Reunion in Blyth come along how- ever, the Gross family will wash and polish the tractors until they gleam in the sunlight. They probably look more glamorous than they ever did in the working days of their early farm life. They've earned their dignified life after the thousands of hours of faithful service they gave to their owners. They certainly deserve a better fate than slowly rusting away in a neglected corner of a farm yard. To tractor lovers like the Gross family, preserving a piece of Ontario's agricultural heritage is a labour of love.0 SEPTEMBER 1991 27