Vanishing Saskatchewan Grain Elevators

Gary Knox

E9 Member Emeritus
Site Donor $$
Messages
1,821
Reaction score
743
Location
West Chester, Pennsylvania
Thanks Bob - brought back memories from 70 years ago. A small town in Nebraska of about 25 residents - about 5 miles from the farm I grew up on - had a wooden elevator much like several of those. I remember many trips there with a tractor pulling a wagon full of wheat or corn to sell to the elevator owner. I haven't been back there in several decades, but I'm sure the elevator is long gone.

Gary
 

dang

Administrator
Site Donor
Messages
4,260
Reaction score
3,280
Location
Rocklin, CA
Very cool. Sad to watch for some reason. I'm surprised all that old wood hasn't been harvested and sold for repurposing. Every old shack and building around here has been picked clean.
 

jmackro

Well-Known Member
Messages
2,463
Reaction score
728
Location
San Juan Capistrano, Ca.
OK, I'll ask a dumb question: what do grain elevators do? Why do you need a tall tower to store or process grain? And if the elevators are going away, what has replaced them?
 

Nicad

Well-Known Member
Site Donor
Messages
3,517
Reaction score
542
Location
Toronto
OK, I'll ask a dumb question: what do grain elevators do? Why do you need a tall tower to store or process grain? And if the elevators are going away, what has replaced them?
OK, I'll ask a dumb question: what do grain elevators do? Why do you need a tall tower to store or process grain? And if the elevators are going away, what has replaced them?
Heck if I know....I'm from Ontario, actually Toronto... which means I know less.
 

Gary Knox

E9 Member Emeritus
Site Donor $$
Messages
1,821
Reaction score
743
Location
West Chester, Pennsylvania
In regard to the video Dan posted, a brief comment about the 'internal workings' in these elevators. When the grain flowed down, it exited the center and frequently left a very steep 'wall' of grain from the center 'drain' to the outer wall of the silo. Frequently a person would need to get into the area to rake the grain down. Seemed at least once a year out in the big grain growing areas that resulted in an avalanche of grain (especially wheat), in which the person was trapped and died - just like the the danger from snow bank avalanches.
 

steve in reno

Well-Known Member
Messages
609
Reaction score
77
Location
reno,nevada USA
They randomly explode due to the grain exiting the grain drain and ending up in the pit, in the bottom below the elevator. This grain would ferment and create alcholol. It was a nasty job to clean, so that would not happen. And the cleaner would catch a buzz for sure AMHIK.
I worked in at an elevator after HSchool. Drove semi full of grain to St Louis every night as a side job.
I wasn't 18, so illegal driving semi.
 
Top