Scrap Only Means You Stopped Looking At The Right Numbers First-nga9999 - Chainityai

Scrap Only Means You Stopped Looking At The Right Numbers First-nga9999

The first time Ronnie Fitch laughed at me, I was standing in my kitchen with a phone cord twisted around my wrist and grease under my thumbnail.

I had called to ask for the broken irrigation pumps stacked behind Heartland Ag Supply.

Ronnie thought I wanted one for parts.

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I told him I wanted all of them.

There was a pause on the line, and then he laughed the way a man laughs when he has already put you in the wrong drawer.

He told me those pumps were scrap.

He told me the motors were burned, the bowls were ruined, and the manufacturers would never stand behind anything I tried to make from them.

Then his voice sharpened.

“Touch my scrap again and I’ll ruin you with every farmer in this county.”

I looked through the kitchen window at the machine shed my father had helped me build, and I did not raise my voice.

I told Ronnie I understood.

That was true, but not in the way he meant.

I understood pumps because my father had made me understand water before I was old enough to run a tractor.

When I was seven, I stood at the edge of a hand-dug well and handed him tools while he climbed down into the heat and sand.

He told me running water in a farmhouse was not magic.

It was work.

It was patience.

It was knowing what was under your own feet.

By the spring of 1987, every dealer around us was selling the same kind of submersible pump as if the county had voted on it.

Nobody had voted.

They bought what Ronnie sold because their fathers bought what the dealer told them to buy, and most farmers had too much work to turn every purchase into an argument.

I was not against new machines.

I was against machines that did not match the ground they were put into.

The aquifer under our part of Iowa was warm in August, gritty with fine sand, and never as steady as a brochure wanted it to be.

I had tested my own well water years earlier through the extension office.

The report came back at 230 parts per million of sand.

The pump manual wanted less than 50.

I circled both numbers in red ink and put the page in my binder.

Ronnie never asked me about that binder.

Most people did not ask about a farmer’s binder until they needed what was inside it.

I borrowed my neighbor’s flatbed and went to Heartland before Ronnie could change his mind.

The shed behind his shop leaned to one side, and the door scraped the dirt because nobody had cared enough to fix it.

Inside were pumps he had pulled from other people’s wells and forgotten.

Some were whole.

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