Winter Conditions During Fall Harvest

Nancy Eberts – Eberts Harvesting, Inc. 

We are working on soybeans in Eastern North Dakota and have finally had some field time. The snow, ice and humid/gray days (along with winter conditions) have subsided – for now.

The picturesque frost came off the trees after a few days and looked like hail on the ground.

Harvest 2018 – soybeans

This morning it was 6 above with a windchill of 6 below. Cold is good! It’s the above freezing that makes things “unworkable” in the field.

Morning weather snapshot.
The windows in our camper this morning!

I have water in the bathroom but not the kitchen. But…hey…I can still take a shower and do dishes in the bathroom sink. Life is good!

Myron is always up at the crack of dawn getting things started and “unplugged”.  His quick breakfast is usually an egg sandwich in Reynolds Wrap (quick to eat if no time to sit) and, of course, his vitamins and vegetables!  (In liquid form!)

Still a lunch box with extra grape juice and tea!

Supper tonight is scalloped potatoes and roast beef! Gonna run the oven as much as I can. I may need to run to Menards later today to get more washer fluid and Howe’s for the trucks .

Jared It’s the season for the warm cap!

Working together to prepare the draper heads for the day. The frost (and sometimes even snow) overnight freezes the soybean dust and debris to the belt and in every crevice on the header.

With the snow and frost every morning, the machines, and especially the heads, need to be cleaned up. Soybean dust and debris is nothing unusual but when you add frozen humid air continually it is an added daily chore. Cole is running the pry bar this morning.

Cole
Myron

There have been days when it has been necessary to use the torch to heat up the frozen soybean dust and debris to clean the heads.  The equipment is continually subjected to the frozen air and cold temperatures.

Jared uses the torch to “heat things up” to make for quick and easy clean up.

Another “seasonal necessity” is windshield washer fluid – we have now switched to the purple stuff (-35 degree gallon jugs). This is sprayed on not only in the morning but also a few times throughout the day if the weather includes light snow. It’s sprayed again at night so the build-up doesn’t freeze to the header and helps make for easier servicing in the morning.

Spray, spray, spray!

The video is an example of spraying the fluid on the edge of the draper. This is what they have been doing for quite some time to help keep debris from sticking and building up.

Stocking up on windshield washer fluid at Menards.  Took longer because two old truckers were telling stories!

In the frigid temps, a constant check of air pressure, whether equipment or trucks, is a must.  Single digits can make tire pressure a constant “situation”. The combines are out in the conditions overnight and, although plugged in, it takes some time to get rolling in the morning.

Andrew

The mornings are long enough just getting things started and rolling – but there is always something. Here, a spindle broke. Myron has the repairs and got things back together in no time. Some days, there is “just one more thing” to add to the list of morning chores.

Alex

Humid air and cold temperatures make for what looks like a cool picture but, in reality, is a constant struggle!

I sent this picture to friends telling them my tits were froze-get your mind out of the gutter!
You never think of this in the heat of the summer.
Frosty!

Sometimes, you just can’t believe what is happening. 

All in all, we keep moving forward…slow, but steady.

There are a lot of acres of crops yet to be harvested around here. The October 11th snowstorm (which dropped 13” of snow), the continuing moisture, humidity and cold temperatures have created an interesting fall harvest. The nights are longer now as the combines and other equipment are driven to a farmstead near the field to plug in whatever they can.  It is a constant cold – a constant part of “getting it done”. But you do what you have to do. You know you’re not alone and that, little by little, it will get done.

You take the good with the bad.

If Mother Nature gives us a break, things will move along so that we will be home before Christmas!

Nancy Eberts
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2 thoughts on “Winter Conditions During Fall Harvest

  1. Glen Nauman Very interesting post on harvest in the frozen north. What is the moisture running on the soybeans, are they going in the bin to dry or straight to the elevator? Also, do you have any trouble with the sieves freezing up with all that ice going through? We are in northwest Missouri, just across the river from Nebraska where some of your help is from. I actually live just up the street from their aunt. Thankfully we finished our soybeans the day after Thanksgiving just ahead of 8 inch blizzard on Sunday. Still have corn to go as do many others. Has been a very trying season. Couldn't buy a rain all summer and then get 9 inches first two weeks in October now snow. Had a feeling it was going to be a challenge when we had 6 inches of snow on Easter Sunday. Enjoy the posts about your travels and your uplifting attitude on life. Especially enjoyed the pictures of harvest at your own farm and that wheatland 1256 International running your auger. Good luck with the rest of your harvest and safe travels back home.

    1. Nancy Good morning, I apologize for the late response just a lot going on. Not all the beans had the ‘ice’ in them and with time and wind that melted off. The moisture is anywhere from 18-24 (there is the frozen stage and the ‘above freezing’ stage) There are some being dried and some hauled to elevators, whichever are taking them at that specific moisture. One thing about harvest -things change with sun and wind within hours —- how the day starts generally isn’t how finished in this weather. The sieves do and can freeze up hence the daily/ or more cleaning or moving to different fields. Just isn’t one specific answer - Everything about Agriculture has variables! Thanks for your response and compliment—it has been a ‘trying’ year for everyone from seed to harvest. But with AG is HOPE!

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