By Frank Jeter,
Extension Editor, N.C. State College, Raleigh, as published in the Wilmington Star, June 10, 1948
Speaking of mechanization on the farm, Henry Taylor of the
Vale Crucis community in Watauga County says that these bulldozers are proving
to be a valuable farm implement. In 1940, a freshet washed a number of deep,
unsightly holes in the creek bottom pasture near his farm. The flood covered
the land with loose stones of all sizes. In fact, it practically ruined two
acres of his best pasture. The other day he hired a bulldozer to level the
tract, fill up in the holes, and cover or move the stones. He says the
improvement in the looks of his place is worth the cost, to say nothing of
having the land ready for reseeding to pasture grasses. And so it appears that
mechanization is coming steadily and surely to lighten the burden of the North
Carolina Farmer.
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