Cotton picking these days.

/ Cotton picking these days. #1  

dusty3030

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/ Cotton picking these days. #2  
I well remember the first mechanical picker on our farm. We still went behind it to pick what it missed. We also had two pickings as we didn't have chemicals to make all the boles open, so it took some waiting. I didn't like to pick cotton, but I liked the extra money picking for neighbors.
 
/ Cotton picking these days.
  • Thread Starter
#3  
Amazing to be picking on six rows AND stalks picked clean in one picking.

Me and my old Daddy stopped to look at a field last weekend amazed at how clean it is compared to what was left not all that long ago.

And how the labor is down to near nothing in a cotton harvest.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #4  
Thanks for posting this link.

You are too young to remember the days before mechanical cotton pickers became common. My Dad grew a small acreage of cotton as a cash crop in the 1950s. He gave me my first paying job -- picking cotton by hand. I wasn't very proficient, but I earned enough money to buy my first bicycle. I think he may have paid me more than the going piece rate (cents/pound), though. :) I don't remember how he transported the cotton to the gin or what measures he took to compress the cotton before doing so. It certainly wasn't a module builder. I'm not sure why he gave up cotton production -- low prices, the boll weevil, changes in the government program,...?

These days there is very little cotton grown in my area and I was not aware of the new baling technology. It makes sense though -- having a picker that can compress the cotton for transportation rather than offloading to a separately-manned module builder.

Do you have any idea how much the new pickers cost relative to conventional pickers?

Any idea how many acres Omega farms?

Again, thanks for posting.

Steve
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #5  
The camera work from the little remote copter is amazing. I really need to get one.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #6  
What seemed really ingenious is the way cotton baling in the fields has evolved to using the same bale handling equipment as hay bales. That eliminates a whole family of equipment and doubles the use of existing or common equipment. That's a home run in my book.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #7  
But safer I'd imagine. Growing up it seems we heard at least once a year, if not more, of a man, woman, or child, that was suffocated because while waiting for the next dump of cotton into the trailer they laid out and took a nap. The operator didn't check and dumped a load of cotton on them.
I admit, it was fun doing flips and dives off the side of the trailer into that soft fresh picked cotton.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #8  
This clip reminded me of a scene in The Heat of the Night, one of my favorite movies -- Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier are driving to the home of a wealthy plantation owner and pass a cotton field that is being picked by hand. Remembering that scene and the accompanying music make me want to order a DVD of the movie.

I'm sure that the hand-picking was for dramatic effect -- any substantial acreage would have been mechanically harvested at the time the movie was set.

Steve
 
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/ Cotton picking these days. #9  
For many years, cotton was compacted by a "cotton tromper" who literally tromped the cotton down by foot as it was weighed and dumped by the field boss and picker. This continued quite some time after mechanical pickers to be replaced by a tractor mounted ram that tamped it down. Being a "tromper" seemed like fun at first, but was extremely tiring. Cotton was transported in specialized cotton trailers pulled by tractor or truck depending on the farmer and distance to the gin which there were many.

At the gin, it was taken out by a hand operated "suck", basically a large vacuum hose, also a very tiring job. Once the cotton was processed with the seeds and dirt removed, it was compressed into bales. These bales were then sent to a "cotton compress" where the bales were "compressed" into even more tightly compacted, heavier bales. It was often stored there whether by the owner or farmer who paid a storage fee and sold when prices were optimum.

I worked in the heart of cotton country and had access to all the production facilities and watched the change in technology. My first visit to a compress was an eye opener as they were steam operated at the time with open pits and giant rams with no surrounding protection and sometimes the workers would ride the ram down into the pit.

My last visit to a cotton company was several years ago and was pretty much all automated with only a few workers.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #10  
My father owned an insurance agency when I was young. He insured many cotton fields and a couple of gins in the rich black lands that are now North Dallas's urban sprawl. In the '50s and even early '60s, cotton was hand picked. As a matter of fact, bolls were either pulled whole or the lint picked out. Of course, picking meant exposing fingers to the sharp edges of the hull. Cotton pickers often had gloves with the finger tips cut off. My father took me into one of his clients fields so I could experience picking. It didn't take 10 minutes for me to decide that was not something I wanted to do. Besides dragging that heavy bag and constantly having sore fingers, you had to keep your eyes peeled for copperheads in the patches. Water Moccasins in the irrigation ditches were also common. Cotton picking and hay hauling were for people who wanted to daily be worked to exhaustion. I remember visiting one cotton gin and it being so noisy I don't know what anyone was saying. I got lucky and learned washing machine repair and did janitorial work while in high school. It was far less physical work for the amount of pay.:)
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #12  
That's a really great video. It's wonderful to see such efficiency. I would say that one fourth of the cotton is wasted around here and left on the plant. Sometimes you wonder if the field was harvested, there's so much left.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #13  
I am a northern boy raised on a farm with corn, soybeans, alfalfa, wheat and oats. When I was a kid the largest combines around were the JD 7700. These handled a 6 row cornhead easily. Today's monster machines handle a 12 row head just as easily with double the yield. The pickers in this video appear to be on a par with the combines I see in fields today, but yet they only harvest 6 rows at a time. I'm just curious why that is. I know nothing about cotton farming. Is cotton that much more difficult to get into the machine?
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #15  
But safer I'd imagine. Growing up it seems we heard at least once a year, if not more, of a man, woman, or child, that was suffocated because while waiting for the next dump of cotton into the trailer they laid out and took a nap. The operator didn't check and dumped a load of cotton on them.
I admit, it was fun doing flips and dives off the side of the trailer into that soft fresh picked cotton.


You forgot the fun of the once-a-day mad rattlesnake dumped in the trailer with the cotton. :)

Bruce
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #16  
/ Cotton picking these days. #17  
/ Cotton picking these days. #18  
You forgot the fun of the once-a-day mad rattlesnake dumped in the trailer with the cotton. :)

Bruce

Never had a rattlesnake in a cotton trailer, but I have had them dumped on me in a peanut trailer. They are usually skin alive by the time they come through the picker and not to happy to meet you in the trailer.
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #19  
Deere website shows the base 7760 is closer $800K list and that is with no bells and whistles....

The picker I cited was listed as a 2012 model: Stk #: CONSIGNMENT; 3 Hours; 500 hp; NEW NEVER USED! HAS POWERGUARD COMPREHENSIVE COVERAGE FOR 36 TOTAL MONTHS OR 1000 TOTAL HOURS.

I don't have a clue as to how much JD dealers discount such large ticket items. Also, would EPA regulations (i.e. Tier 3 vs. 4) explain a price increase for the 2013 models?

Steve
 
/ Cotton picking these days. #20  
This clip reminded me of a scene in The Heat of the Night, one of my favorite movies -- Rod Steiger and Sidney Poitier are driving to the home of a wealthy plantation owner and pass a cotton field that is being picked by hand. Remembering that scene and the accompanying music make me want to order a DVD of the movie.

I'm sure that the hand-picking was for dramatic effect -- any substantial acreage would have been mechanically harvested at the time the movie was set.

Steve

The movie was made in 1967 so I'm not so sure that was for dramatic effect. In those days the fields often had to be picked twice with a mechanical picker and only once with human pickers. It might have been cheaper to have people do it.
Machines are much better today.
 

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