Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
One of my late uncles at the time far in the future father in law won a small parcel of land(5,500 acres) in a poker game during the big gold strike in Colorado. At the time thought to only be useful for raising sheep since so much of it was peppered with rocks up to about 12" The land laid pretty much fallow for 60 years until my great uncle married his high school sweetheart. For a wedding present They were given their choice of any 3 sections of the land for their homestead. Sometime in the Early 1900s he and she had managed to turn 1 of those sections of land into productive crop producing farmland My grandpa had married the other sister they were also given 3 sections. Eventually huge traction engines littered the valley dragging plows rakes and wagons with 100s of labors picking up rocks claiming the land for fields the 1 brother of the 2 sisters had received his 3 sections when he got married and he set up a crusher to crush the rocks being hauled out of the fields. Now nearly 140 years since the famed poker game there is probably not a pebble larger than a golf ball anywhere on the original 5,500 acres. Some of the highest grade barley in all of Colorado and potatoes are grown there, At one time there must have been more than 50 24inch diameter artesian wells drilled filling miles upon miles of irrigation canals
Pressing the rocks back into the ground must have never entered their minds. Remove them and they are gone forever if others float up to plow depth, remove them as well.
They were tough back then. I just think of the amount of labor to load a horse drawn wagon with stones, then hand unload it again in a rock pile. To do 640 acres, took much dedication.
Using a 'mobile' rock crusher would be the ticket, still huge labor investment in digging out the partially buried rocks and lifting them to the height needed. I bet they had to use hammers to make the larger boulders small enough for the crusher.
I look at what our society has now, with people that can't even change oil on their autos, or repair their own home, vs. the folks 100 years ago that did all that, as well built their home. Seems we've inhibited this knowledge transfer, that used to be part of basic survival.