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The Rural Voice, 1996-10, Page 24The worst year he can remember was in the 1940s when the wheat was too wet to harvest - the stooks were green with sprouts (though they eventually got them in). The year was so wet there were no potatoes dug or available at the markets for the townspeople to buy. The MacGregor family has been farming since 1851 in the Kippen area when the MacGregor brothers picked out land close by, from the 13th to 17th concession. Their land is more scattered now, he says. JJis dad, William, who lived to be 88, purchased a steam threshing outfit in 1914 from the South Huron Syndicate of farmers and continued threshing in the area with the same customers. Threshing the crops of 50 or 60 customers a year meant he had to keep a tight schedule. Customers would book in, and he might look after one or more in a day in the peak harvest months of August, September and October. In 1915, having the harvest threshed cost farmers between $4 and $26. Neighbour J. Caldwell paid $17 and B.C. Edwards paid $5. Keeping the steam machinery in repair was a tall order. Using up time and keeping customers waiting, he went to London on the train for parts, fare $1.80, or took his old car, but the tires blowing out were always a problem. Then he tried tire filler, but he would turn a corner too quickly and tire filler would go in all directions. For the first few years, he kept up this acquired threshing business with a steam engine and thresher. Ron recalls a story with steam engines which made quite a racket as they worked: when the MacGregors went to fill a silo at a neighbour's place, they noticed the family's cows in the evening would be milked as they stood in the yard rather than be tied up. The steam engine let off steam and the cows took off. When the men looked around, they couldn't see the cows or the pail of milk — all they could see was a woman wiping the milk off her face with her apron. By 1919, he was ready to retire the steam machine, and he went to Robert Bell, Engine and Thresher Company, a local threshing manufacturer of Seaforth, to check out a gas engine to replace the steam. 20 THE RURAL VOICE The MacGregor name has been on the Kippen-area farm since 1851 when two MacGregor brothers took up land near each other. He wanted to deal with someone close, someone he knew, although the Bell Company more often sold to Western customers than local. The gas engine, a 22-40, a 40 horsepower engine, was bought for $3,200, about the cost of a hundred acres of land. This engine with slow speed motor and large bearings was especially adapted for heavy pulling and roadwork. With a new separator for $2,500 the threshing outfit was complete. (Models of this tractor and threshers of the era are available from the Seaforth Agricultural Society.) The threshing days were dusty and long with many customers looked after, the air full of chaff and kernels, and often workers had to blow the chaff off the water pail before they could take a drink. He marvelled they almost never complained about this. In the 1920s, the charge for threshing varied with the customer, what and how much was done; for example, the Doig Brothers paid $22.50 for six hours threshing, and Ed Sproat paid $20.68 for two hours threshing, with the grain being cut. If some farmers couldn't pay, they took a note. When times were lean, the interest was added to the principal, and farmers got by that way. In the 1930s, custom threshing cost farmers five or six cents a bushel for oats, or $2.50 per hour, not as much as in 1925. "We were in kind of a box in the '30s, with the gas companies wanting money up front, when gas was 11 cents a gallon, and the farmers often not wanting to pay us right away." Aht the age of 13, Ron was expected to work like an adult and he remarked at the way is father trusted him to back or cable the separator into the barn and in complete darkness without lights. "I could only tell from the signals of his lantern when to stop, or I'd have had the separator dropping out the other side of the barn!" Coal oil lanterns, not hydro, were the norm for lighting the barns. Ron mentioned the responsibilities he had at an early age with amazement, noting that the young people of today aren't as well taught and don't have the same respect for machinery and farming practices. For him, the experience around equipment is learned so it is almost second nature. Ron hopes to teach his grandchildren at an early age the ways of farming, the dangers of machinery, a respect for belts, shields and moving equipment. Although he knows there might not be many more generations of MacGregors as .farmers, he can always point to the past as farming so far has been the MacGregor way of life.0