The Big Move (Out of Irland 4)

Ursula Siebert
We arrived on April Fool´s Day. Actually, it was April 2 when the kids and I made it over by plane. However, nomen est omen! (The name itself)

My Ex had traveled ahead with his Jeep and a tractor in tow. A beautiful Deutz 54. "Almost the vintage of my wife", he used to joke. For an interesting viewing: http://www.15er-deutz.de/http://www.15er-deutz.de/. A real beauty. There had been two prior trips to haul over farm machinery that he had bought in Germany, a combine harvester and a threshing machine. The threshing machine was an enormous monstrosity, impractical to maneuver long distance, across the Irish Sea, and on narrow Irish country roads. But it was cheap and it might come in handy, you never know; if not as an actual tool, at least for the agricultural farm museum he was planning. My Ex was a hoarder (pack rat).

In order to handle it, it had to be dismantled. It was a 3-day job for an experienced farm machinery serviceman who was in his 70s. He had worked on these things all his life and his son had many years of experience under his belt too. Two pictures of the joke were taken to be sure to know how to re-assemble the machine in Ireland. And off it went on its emigrational journey.


I´m not giving the punch line away but you can imagine it was never put together again. This Humpty-Dumpty was either too tricky or too big, parts were either badly marked and nobody around who had seen this type of thresher and worked on it. Or it was outright cheaper to rent a modern one when the time came. Starting the farm and keeping it running as a one man band kept its owner too busy anyway.

An 18-wheeler or articulated truck with all our belongings arrived a few days later at the farm. It had done the 200km journey from the port in Rosslare twice, because the driver failed to have the proper transport papers signed. We waited yet another day in an almost empty house. The huge truck blocked the country road for a full day while we unloaded. Whenever a car tried to pass, the truck driver had to jiggle it a few yards backwards and then forwards again. The neighborhood took to us from the start…
Print Email
Bookmark and Share

Ursula Siebert

Ursula Siebert, originally a German teacher & lecturer turned farmer, then businesswoman, lived in different European countries before coming to the USA. She is now a free-lance writer. Her blog of the Ex Farmer's Wife and Out of Ireland is:
http://inandoutofireland.blogspot.com/