The HOA Tried To Tow My Tractor, Then The Town Saw The Receipts-Quieen - Chainityai

The HOA Tried To Tow My Tractor, Then The Town Saw The Receipts-Quieen

The letter was taped to my front door on a Tuesday morning, right above the brass knocker my wife polished every spring before she passed.

I had one glove on, one glove in my back pocket, and a line of damp soil across my sleeve from fixing an irrigation valve before breakfast.

Sandra from the HOA had signed the bottom in blue ink so sharp it looked angry.

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Your tractor is an eyesore, the notice said, and this community has standards.

It gave me forty-eight hours to remove the tractor from my property, or the board would have it towed at my expense.

I read it once as a homeowner.

Then I read it again as a farmer.

Those are not always the same man.

The homeowner in me felt the insult first, because nobody likes being told the thing that keeps his life standing is ugly.

The farmer in me started counting.

Two hundred acres.

Seven local buyers.

One school lunch program.

Three weekly produce routes.

One working tractor that could be seen from the road because the machine shed was full of harvest bins that week.

Sandra had looked at the tractor and seen a stain on her new neighborhood.

She had not looked at what the tractor fed.

That was the mistake.

I folded the letter and set it beside the coffee maker.

Then I went back outside and finished the valve, because lettuce does not wait for a board meeting.

The tractor was a 1970s green workhorse with chipped paint, a patched seat, and an engine that knew my hands by sound.

It had hauled pumpkins for church fundraisers and pulled stuck cars out of ditches after storms.

It had carried crates of tomatoes to the corner market where Sandra bought hers in neat paper bags three minutes from her front door.

For eleven years, I had grown food quietly while the subdivision grew around me.

People waved at my farm stand.

People asked for extra sweet corn.

People took pictures of their kids beside my sunflowers in August.

Then a woman with a clipboard decided the machine behind all that was embarrassing.

Sandra had moved in eight months earlier.

She bought one of the houses near the entrance, the kind with stone columns and a driveway sealed so black it looked wet.

Within three months, she joined the HOA board.

Within five months, she was running the meetings like a courtroom where she was judge, witness, and weather.

She sent letters about mulch color.

She measured grass from the sidewalk.

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