In 1975 a brand new Storm King lighter was a $1.98 and a geniune Zippo was $3.45 at the R&S Truck Stop at Collins, Missouri.
There was not a thing wrong with a Storm King. Except they were made of aluminum and weren’t a Zippo.
I hit a really good lick one day and my hay hauling crew hauled just over a thousand bales at a quarter a bale and by the time I’d paid for labor and gas and truck rent I’d cleared well over a hundred dollars, enough to take my crew to R&S and feed them and buy all three a new Zippo and myself one too. I also bought four cans of lighter fluid and four packs of flints. It came to less than $20, plus the meals and tip.
I still went home, with a hundred dollar bill.
Life is too short to not buy the real Zippo.
They last until you lose them.
I keep a Zippo with a package of six flints under the flap every place I may need one and have several in reserve, maybe that one from 1975 at the farm somewhere.
I just bought a new one. For less than $25 you can smile like you were a 17 year old kid again, with money to burn.
We hauled about 80,000 pounds of hay worth about a thousand dollars thaf day in 1975.
Today one guy running a tractor spears 50 big round bales that are worth $5,000 at $100 a bale.
500 pound steer feeder calves then brought maybe 60 cents a pound, the same calf today over $3 a pound.
There was not a thing wrong with a Storm King. Except they were made of aluminum and weren’t a Zippo.
I hit a really good lick one day and my hay hauling crew hauled just over a thousand bales at a quarter a bale and by the time I’d paid for labor and gas and truck rent I’d cleared well over a hundred dollars, enough to take my crew to R&S and feed them and buy all three a new Zippo and myself one too. I also bought four cans of lighter fluid and four packs of flints. It came to less than $20, plus the meals and tip.
I still went home, with a hundred dollar bill.
Life is too short to not buy the real Zippo.
They last until you lose them.
I keep a Zippo with a package of six flints under the flap every place I may need one and have several in reserve, maybe that one from 1975 at the farm somewhere.
I just bought a new one. For less than $25 you can smile like you were a 17 year old kid again, with money to burn.
We hauled about 80,000 pounds of hay worth about a thousand dollars thaf day in 1975.
Today one guy running a tractor spears 50 big round bales that are worth $5,000 at $100 a bale.
500 pound steer feeder calves then brought maybe 60 cents a pound, the same calf today over $3 a pound.
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