By Melissa Hart Imagine four-wheel drive John Deere tractors gathering cobwebs in a pole barn with doors that hadn’t been opened in months. Can you see fallow farm ground growing up with weeds and annoying brush? Or farm lanes that are grown over because there was no traffic in or out of the farm. The grease guns are never used, the farm implements rusting away behind the barn and no fuel trucks in and out of the driveway for lack of need. The neighborhood equipment dealer would cease selling new tractors, and electric lawn mowers would be the new hot item. The parts manager would also serve as the bookkeeper, the part time mechanic and the custodian. There would be one grain elevator to serve the entire county, one farm store would be able to serve three counties and the seed dealer and chemical salesman would be an online store somewhere in Kansas. Stockyards would close up, vibrant diners that served local farmers would shutter their doors and ...
I'm Melissa Hart and I'm glad you're here! Follow my instagram @farmwriter