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Comments for 1929 Farmall Picking Up Bundles
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Dick2 wrote on Monday, December 31, 2012 (PST):
  • Looks like it was copied from the old horse drawn bucker or modified from an old horse drawm bucker that was used to bring loose hay to the stacker. The horse drawn bucker that Dad had used a horse on each end of the bucker to pull it. Dad sat on a seat in the back kind of as a counter weight. It the horses started a run-away, he just stepped off of the back and let the horses go - but they didn't get far because without a counterweight the tines jabbed into the ground and stopped the horses!
    37Chief wrote on Sunday, January 20, 2013 (PST):
  • Dad has something very similar. He called it his buck rake.He would rake his hay into shocks to cure. When it came time to bale hay he would get the buck rake attached to his Farmall F12, and bring the shocks to the stationary baler, where I would help pitch into the machine. Stan
    Ron from ON wrote on Thursday, January 31, 2013 (PST):
  • Its a Buck Rake dad had it on a Massy 33 It would clean a field faster than you could with small squares
    rex wrote on Wednesday, June 12, 2013 (PDT):
  • it is called a buck rake , my dad talked about one they had one on my grand pas f-20, , i got three 20 s and an ole m
    BoonvilleKid wrote on Monday, July 29, 2013 (PDT):
  • As other have noted, that is a buckrake. It was the third implement used in a hay field, the mower being first, the dump rake being next and then the buckrake was third. It was initially pulled by a horse on each side and the driver rode in the middle on the backside platform. After one of Dad's horse-team died he made the buckrake into a system similar to what is in the photograph, mounted on a John Deer B. After raking the hay into rows it was another of my jobs, running the buckrake mounted on the B. That got kind of scary as you couldn't see over the hay so you never really knew where to turn. It really got spooky when you pushed that big load into the stationary hay baler for the pickfork men. I was always scared I'd run the tines into their foot or into the baler.
    allen blunk wrote on Saturday, January 04, 2014 (PST):
  • That is a buck rake. My dad bought a new one in the early 50s to move loose hay from the field to the barn. Was much easyer and quicker than useing horses and hay wagon. It was mounted on a 1939 jd b.
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