The AgriPost
August 26, 2016
It Took an Army of Volunteers The Record Setting Harvesting Hope Threshing Bee Brings Back Happy Times
Bill Newton fixes the buckle on a binder before heading out to the field. By Les Kletke
Bill Newton knows how much preparation goes into 15 minutes of fame. He was part of the army of volunteers that helped prepare the machines and all the other behind the scene activity that went into setting a Guinness Book of World Records for the most threshing machines operating at one time.
To qualify for the record the machines had to operate continuously for 15 minutes. To achieve this feet Newton moved his camper to Austin at the end of May and spent three weeks preparing machines. He went back to his home in Brandon for a few weeks and arrived June 20 to stay through August. Newton who is 77 years old was
Photo by Les Kletke not alone in his efforts and stayed in the campground that swelled with volunteers as the July 28 event neared. At the age of 13 Newton’s father emigrated from England to Aberdeen, Saskatchewan where he farmed with four brothers. His father eventually had a threshing machine and crew that travelled from farm to farm in
the area. Bill left the farm but it was in his blood and he spent 33 years with Flexi Coil’s research department. When asked what brought him to Austin he said, “I still enjoy working with the machinery. To make it work there is some maintenance involved and you have to be a part of that.” continued on page 2
By Harry Siemens Harvest 2016 ground to an abrupt halt after heavy rains topped up already wet soils in much of southern Manitoba. Yet the Sunday before the heavy Monday rains old-fashioned threshing machines, 138 to be exact from all over North America harvested for 15 minutes. Austin, Manitoba became home to another world record on July 31 when 139 antique threshing machines harvested a field simultaneously for 15 minutes at the Manitoba Agricultural Museum. “This was a once-in-a lifetime event,” said Elliot Sims, Co-organizer of Harvesting Hope: A World Record to Help the Hungry, held during the Manitoba Threshermen’s Reunion & Stampede at the Museum. “You just don’t see stuff like this anymore,” he said. “The energy from the participants and crowd was amazing. You could feel the pride and excitement.” You may wonder whether all the expense in organizing, moving machines and the energy that people expend in pulling it off is worth it, but you only have to get involved to find out it is much more than just running machines and threshing grain. In Austin, about 8,000 people watched 750 volunteers from across Canada and the US break the Guinness World Record for the ‘most threshing machines operating simultaneously.’ The previous record of 111 machines was held by a group from St. Albert, Ontario. Altogether, 75 acres of winter wheat was bound and 30,000 sheaves were cut to be threshed. The combined machines were capable of threshing approximately 17,000 bushels of continued on page 2