I actually had an old timer tell me that people should just buy land like he did. "Back in 1954 I bought 2500 acres of woodlands for $1500, and paid for it all by working with the timber company. If I did it, anyone can."After the war all the boys came home and their eyes widened when they stepped their feet back on their farms. The amount of corn that needed to be shucked before it went to market had multiplied tenfold.
By the time Dixon finally invented the auto-corn-shucker-matic peoples’ tastes had moved onto more indulgent vegetables like sprouts and cabbage. Great Papi Long John ended up purchasing 5,000 for a whopping $5 after the great corn crash.
I never heard what happened to Dixon, heck he’s probably still waiting for the corn market to come back around to this day. I do know that Great Papi Long John couldn’t tell the different between cabbage, corn, or even celery for that matter, and he’s the one that bought 5,000 acres for 5 dollars American.
Heck, it’s all the same anyway once you steam it, you know?
I would try to explain that land isn't that cheap anymore, but he kept throwing inflation prices at me like Briar Lee does for Kaywoodies. There are so many more dynamics than just cabbage in 1954 and now.