The antique machinery shows are over for another year. Blue is in his stall, awaiting more work on
the hydraulic lift. While most of the
time we write about Blue and farm jeep history, there are more things happening
on the old family farm that Farm Jeep calls home.'
The real farm jeep
We got started in all of this with the idea of having an old
jeep to use for chores around the farm.
Although no longer a working farm, Mother Nature is always at work
trying to reclaim open fields and forest trails. For the past 6 months, Barry has been engaged
in a battle with an invasive tree (autumn olive) and the old rusty, trusty CJ2a
has been a critical weapon. Every day,
weather permitting, Barry heads to the barn where Yeller lives and fires up the
jeep. It is already loaded with a
variety of gas and manual tools (saws, pruning shears). Then off to pick up a little trailer for
hauling the trees and brush to the burn pile. In the photo above, taken in the early morning, the little red trailer is full and overflowing.
The ’47, with its faded paint and rusty body just keeps
running. One morning, Barry noticed that
one of the trailer tires was low. It was
then that he realized that he hadn’t put air in the 2a’s tires in the past
decade. With Thanksgiving just ahead,
the focus on chores will shift to trips into the wood to hauling firewood. No matter the season or job involved. Ole
Yeller is the true farm jeep.
A different (retired) farm jeep
For the past 30 years, Barry has had a CJ5 or CJ7 as his
daily driver/fun jeep. The 1979 CJ7
Golden Eagle has been in semi-retirement for several years, awaiting a
restoration. This winter was to be the
start of that restoration but plans have changed. Instead, we decided to acquire a CJ7 that
doesn’t need extensive restoration and to spend our energies and dollars on the
’47 and ’49 jeeps.
So it was another JRT (jeep retrieval trip), this time to
Columbus, OH. The seller owns a couple
of auto repair shops and had acquired a 1977 CJ7 from a client who no longer wanted it. He was looking for a “fun” jeep to drive
around. Over the past couple of years,
he repaired and replaced about every component.
The body is in great shape. It
has a flat black paint job and has been dubbed “Matte” (a working name) .
While we don’t know Matte’s full history, it should feel at
home here. Before his makeover, Matte
had lived and worked on a farm. The
Golden Eagle is a special jeep and we are hoping to find a new home where it
will get the full attention and restoration it needs. The new CJ7 will take up duty as the “winter
emergency” vehicle and a working member of the Farm Jeep family.