A Texas Farmer’s Smaller Tractors Put Big County Pride On The Hook-myhoa

The first time Brock put my farm on trial, he used a fuel-credit notice like a weapon.

He did it at the co-op table, in a room that smelled like old coffee, printer toner, and dust blown in from the cotton fields.

Three board members sat there pretending this was routine business.

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Roy, the clerk, kept his eyes on the file instead of me.

Brock stood at the end of the table with one hand on the paper and the other hooked into his belt like he owned the room.

I had traded five huge green tractors for four smaller red ones three days earlier.

That was enough for half the county to decide I was broke.

Brock had gone one step further.

He had written a complaint saying my farm could not cover harvest because my new fleet was underpowered and overextended.

He shoved the notice toward me and said, “Park them or lose the loan.”

I looked at the pen beside the paper.

Then I lifted my hand away from it.

If I had signed, I would have agreed to park the tractors, lease bigger equipment through harvest, and let the co-op tighten my fuel line until I proved I could finish.

It sounded like a business precaution if you did not know the man saying it.

I knew Brock.

He farmed the road west of mine, and he treated machinery like bloodline.

If your tractor had more horsepower than his, he noticed.

If it had less, he smirked.

For years, I had played the same game.

My equipment yard had been a row of green giants, five machines with enough steel and horsepower to make a man feel rich even when the bank account said otherwise.

The biggest one sat by the road like a billboard.

Men slowed down when they passed.

I liked that more than I admitted.

Then fuel stopped being a line item and started being a wound.

The year before I traded, my diesel bill had nearly doubled.

I was running the same acres, pulling the same implements, and doing the same work, but every hour in the field cost more than it should have.

At night, I sat at the kitchen table with receipts spread around my elbows.

Jenna watched me do the same math until I finally said, “If fuel stays here, one bad yield puts us under.”

She did not flinch.

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