Bank Barns & Pork Chops

Bank barns & pork chops; do they go together? Today I’m showing you how to grill easy and fast delicious pork chops, and I’m telling stories about my life growing up on our 200 year old farm. Specifically, how Grandpa and I picked and ground corn from our corn cribs, in the bank barn. It was a laborious process, hand shoveling ear corn from place to place and feeding it into a hammer mill driven by the belt pulley on the Farmall H. Grandpa was in his seventies and I was just a kid, but somehow we survived hard work, just as our ancestors had. Some of my best childhood memories are of working and climbing around in our old barns, and I will take you there.

Note:

-We do not offer farm tours or accept visitors
-We do not sell from the farm
-We do not ship our farm’s products
-We do not sell live animals

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23 thoughts on “Bank Barns & Pork Chops

  1. Pete, I really enjoy the videos and the book was an excellent read. You are really adding to the world with these videos, and I for one depend on them to keep my sanity, as a farm boy turned software developer. I have to say, though – I am always put off by the "safety sam" and "efficiency elves" quips. You are reducing yourself every time you use these, and it comes off as defensive. I suspect that what you are reacting to is mostly people who are really just trying to be helpful – but maybe YouTube comments are an imperfect medium for conveying intent. The people who view your videos time after time are your supporters any by and large we mean well – even the ones who focus on safety and efficiency. Something to think about.

  2. When you were talking about the haymow, I was reminded of what I always thought was one of the hardest jobs on the farm: working up in the mow, taking a bale off the elevator, and stacking it properly. There was noise (our elevator was really loud), dust, and heat. Inevitably you'd come down between wagonloads and drink a bunch of water from the nearest hose. At the end of the day, even my 18 year old muscles were exhausted. But it was a good exhaustion, the kind that releases endorphins. I'm sure you've had the same experience. This was back in the 60's. If I tried it now, I'd have to be taken to the hospital, lol. Thanks for the memories of the time when I could do heavy hard work all day and shrug it off with a dip in the pool and a couple of cold beers! My very best to all who live on Just a few Acres Farm, including the livestock and the tractors. I bet most of the gearhead and fieldwork fans on this channel would agree that old Farmalls have personalities! ~~Jeff from CT

  3. Thanks for the memories. We had a mill also and a corn sheller. The left over corn cobs we ground in our mill and used as chicken bedding. I’m older 73 but you childhood on your farm is like mine on my grandfather’s farm.

  4. I can`t begin to say how many of your memories trigger mine. We had a 50 acre mixed farm and we had all those things you talked about although usually slightly different, like a PTO driven hammer mill.

  5. I used to, we used to, back then, back when. Memories are great, especially the good ones, and what we really need today is more people who still do it every day. Even on the smallest scale, it will pay in health benefits to the one doing it, the exercise and high quality food that eventually comes.

  6. Big thumbs up for me. Happy for a good ribeye any day over a pork chop have never had a good pork chop. Always dry even when I don't overcook it when I like it. Like a medium or medium rare always dry. Anyways, I hope this message turns out I'm using. Talk to text and sometimes it messes up. But anyways yeah I have never had a good pork chop for me. It's pork steak all the way. Pork steak with plenty of fat on it. Aunt actually a beef good beef rib buy over any pork any day of the week. That's my taste buds

  7. Wow Pete! The times and places are different but the way I grew up was very much the same. The ear corn,pickers,hammer mill……..Yes Sir, didnt know it then but it was the best time of my life. Thank You.

  8. Thank you for this video. I too remember shoveling ear corn into a belt driven hammer mill with my dad. It felt so good when the hammer mill was shut off. In the winter we would wear 2 pair of cotton gloves and shovel corn with an aluminum scoop shovel. I remember my fingers getting nearly frozen and going into the house to warm them up with cold water that felt warm.

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