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Disclaimer: This video is a storytelling-based narrative inspired by real farm life and family conflict. Some details have been adapted for narrative clarity and emotional impact, and the story is not intended as financial or historical instruction. February 1986. The tractors sold. The planter sold. The land changed hands. But the old manure spreader? No one bid on it. In the late 1970s, high yields meant heavy fertilizer. Heavy fertilizer meant heavy operating loans. When nitrogen prices rose, interest rates spiked, and land values fell, the math collapsed. One farm depended on purchased inputs. The other depended on what it already had. The spreader wasn’t efficient. It wasn’t modern. It didn’t produce record yields. But it reduced dependency. And in a crisis, lower dependency meant survival. This isn’t a story about equipment. It’s about margin. About leverage. About why the least valuable machine in the yard became the difference between staying… and selling. Watch until the end to see what really determines who survives a downturn. #FarmCrisis #OldFarmall #OldJohnDeere #WidowFarmer #FarmLife #RuralStories #DebtFreeFarming #FarmHistory #AmericanFarming #Americanfarmlife #SelfReliance #FarmSurvival #TrueFarmStories #HardEarnedWisdom