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Familiar sounds & unfamiliar sights

Purple joins the usual reds, greens at 10th tractor event

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The sight of an uncharacteristically purple Farmall tractor was enough to make participants in the annual Heritage Tractor Adventure stop and take a second look as the tractors began to gather at the Grundy County Fairgrounds on Sunday. (Herald Photo by Jo Ann Hustis)

A purple cow - maybe. But a brightly gleaming full-size purple vintage farm tractor? Never until Sunday.

“I saw it out there, and I thought, ‘Boy, that must have been some party,’” Orion Samuelson, longtime WGN farm radio personality, said of the 64-year-old International H tractor, resplendent in its magnificent coat of deep purple enamel, at the 10th annual Heritage Tractor Adventure at the Grundy County Fairgrounds.

“That tractor was a rust bucket when we got it,” owner Russ Tjarks of Sibley, Ill., noted of the eye-catcher, which he had on display for a cause — the Polk County Relay for Life Cancer Drive.

“Purple is a cancer color, so we made a purple tractor and named it Purple Cancer Eater. The color and name fit the drive.”

Tjarks bought two IH tractors two years ago, and donated one to the Prairie Central FFA Chapter, of which his granddaughter is a member. The chapter repainted their tractor in IH red, then raffled it off as a fundraising venture. Next they painted Tjarks’ tractor purple as a token of appreciation.

There’s a reason in Tjarks’ life for the purple tractor. He lost his sister to cancer seven years ago. She’d had the disease five years before succumbing.

“I promised my sister I would have a drive in her honor to collect for cancer, and I got connected with Relay for Life,” he said. “I thought the first drive would raise $500, and it brought in $1,200. Last year we turned in $11,200. Money is still tight this year, so I don’t know how the drive will turn out.”

Everett Bower of Greenwood, Ill., skidded to a stop on his heels when he spotted the purple tractor.
“I have a Farmall Super H, but its red,” he said. “This purple one is really cool. What a nice thing.”

A lifelong farmer like his father and his grandfather before him, Bower is participating in the HTA, which ends Wednesday. He’s riding in memory of his brother, whom he lost in a car accident in front of his parents’ home in 1974.

“My dad went through some depression over that,” Bower said. “All his brothers and sisters came to help on the farm, and got him through it. Then he died three years later on the same date as my brother, on July 2, 2007.

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