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October 20, 2010

Cotton 101: After Harvest Comes Moduling

Pickers roll and depending on the equipment, there are a couple of different things that happen. As Alicia mentioned the other day, there is equipment called a boll buggy that may be involved, or a module builder or the picker can have an on-board moduling system.

Cotton used to be put into wagons. Someone would get in the wagon/trailer and jump up and down to compress it. The trailers would be taken to the gin and once emptied, it could be refilled. Farmers had multiple trailers but almost nobody could afford enough to keep harvesting non-stop.

cotton picker & boll buggy

cotton module builder

Moduling was probably invented because it answered a problem farmers had. With a module builder, the cotton be placed in there. The machine would compact it thoroughly and a tarp could cover it until it was transferred to the gin. This kept more cotton from having to take rain directly, etc.

Because everyone loves a big piece of machinery, I thought I’d post video I shot recently at my friend Bob’s. This is an on-board moduling picker from Case IH. I wasn’t ready for the picker to dump so I ended up shooting it from the car. It’s still sort of cool though (despite the mirror showing up some LOL)!

[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FbvwhUMMdS0]

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Filed Under: cotton, farm, Food & Farm Tagged With: boll buggy, Cotton 101, module, timeless, transportation

« Cotton 101: How Harvest has Changed in a Lifetime
Cotton 101: Getting Cotton to the Gin »

Trackbacks

  1. Cotton 101: Getting Cotton to the Gin « ag – a colorful adventure for this city girl says:
    October 25, 2010 at 8:20 am

    […] Cotton 101: After Harvest Comes Moduling […]

  2. How is cotton picked nowadays? | a colorful adventure says:
    December 16, 2011 at 9:36 pm

    […] you what I mean by moduling that’s needed with pickers that do not have the on-board moduling system and shows how those modules are […]

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