Nebraska Farmer’s Tractor Lesson for a Neighbor’s Escalade Under the Oak-Ginny

Karen Kept Parking on My Farm — So I Used My Tractor to Hang Her SUV From a Tree!

At sunrise, the old oak behind my barn threw long shadows across the gravel road, and Karen Salters’s white Escalade sat where no luxury SUV had any business sitting.

It was half lifted, half trapped, balanced with its rear end resting on a broad stump and its front wheels sunk into a shallow rain-cut ditch.

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The rear tires hung uselessly in the air, still clean enough to shine, as if the vehicle had been parked in a showroom by somebody with a terrible sense of humor.

Not a dent on it.

Not a scratch.

Not one broken light, cracked panel, or bent strip of chrome.

Just stuck.

Perfectly, legally, beautifully stuck.

Deputy Trujillo stepped out of his cruiser and stared at it for a full ten seconds before he remembered to close his door.

The radio on his shoulder crackled once, then went quiet, like even the county frequency had decided to hold its breath.

He removed his hat, rubbed the back of his neck, and looked from the Escalade to me, then back to the Escalade again.

I stood beside the barn with my coffee in one hand and my other thumb hooked through my belt loop, trying harder than I care to admit not to smile.

“Well,” he said at last, “that’s different.”

“Yes, sir,” I replied.

“Stable, no damage, and every second of how it got there is on camera.”

He gave me the kind of tired look men give when they know paperwork is about to ruin their morning.

Then he sighed.

“Start from the beginning.”

The beginning was not the oak tree.

It was not the straps.

It was not the tractor.

It was not even Karen screaming on my property like I had personally stolen the moon and hung it from a branch for evidence.

The beginning was quieter than that, because trouble usually is.

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