"USCHI
Hall of Fame" inducted Carl Rieger from Culbertson,
Nebraska.
Carl began
harvesting in 1934 at the age of 21. At first he traveled
from state to state with his equipment the hard way,
- pulling it behind a tractor and later he loaded
it on his, (small), trucks. In the early days the
farmer's wives did the cooking for his harvest crew.
In 1942 he hired a couple and pulled a trailer along
to use as a cook house, feeding the help in shifts.
During those busy times he employed many hired men
and he felt that he also fed people that were not
his employees.
Carl said
the "Harvest Brigade" did not start until
1944, and that was the year he bought his first two
self-propelled combines. During that time he and his
help slept in the farmer's barn, gargage, outside
under the stars or wherever they could find a place.
They always carried their cots and bed rolls wherever
they traveled.
He started
his harvest each year in Kremlin, OK and followed
the harvest up to Montana cutting wheat all the way.
He didn't start doing the fall harvest until 1960-62
when farmers started planting Milo and Corn that they
could harvest with a combine.
1959 Carl
said he owned sixteen Case Combines without cabs or
air-conditioning, unless you count the air and dirt
blowing through your hair as air-conditioning. In
1960 he bought his first combine with a cab. The other
fifteen combines still had no cabs. During that period
Carl owned and traveled with sixteen combines, sixteen
trucks, three pickups and three house trailers and
thirty-two employees. The hardest thing about harvesting
was moving all the equipment across country. The best
thing about harvesting was making money, and enjoying
people. He cut the most years (49) for F.W. Zolduek,
from Krimlin, OK. Every year we returned to the same
areas to cut. And it was good seeing old friends that
treated you like family.
Carl met
Ann in 1962 when she was running a service station.
She was a widow with two children. Carl bought his
fuel, for his harvest operation, at her station, and
in 1965 they married. Ann said after they married
they ate most meals on harvest in restaurants. Naturally,
after awhile Carl hired full time cooks, mainly because
the cafes would not stay open late enough for them
to eat at night. Ann said she became jack of all trades.
The best part of harvesting for Ann was the people
she met along the trail. After the organization was
formed, she said her and Carl always looked forward
to the USCHI Conventions.
Carl owned
about 150 machines, including Massey, Case and Case
IH during 58 years of harvesting.
Carl met
Camiel Beert in 1981 when he bought his first Case
IH combines. He remembers Cam as a mighty fine fellow
that would do anything possible to help him and others
in the harvesting industry. Carl said, "Mercedes,
is also a wonderful person."
He and
his wife Ann retired from harvest in 1992. On March
17,1999 Carl turned 86 years old, Ann was 80 on January
22. Carl said he is proud to be inducted into the
"USCHI Hall of Fame." He said to tell everyone
hello and that he missed seeing them. |