My Hometown: Lighted Tractor Parade Is a Tradition I Can't Miss

Farmers put Christmas lights to equipment to celebrate the season.
Farmers put Christmas lights to equipment to celebrate the season.
(Sara Brown)

There’s a little tradition in my hometown of Centralia, Mo., that’s getting bigger every year. For our community, Christmas season truly begins when area farmers bring their tractors decked with lights down the street.

The tradition started as a way for young farmers to share some holiday cheer and create good will in a rural community that continues to grow. Over the past 11 years, local retailers have added to the fun, staying open late for a crowd of people that often show up more than hour before the parade starts, just to get a parking spot. For the town of 3,500-plus citizens, the influx of a few extra thousand people from the area, and even from multiple states, has created a small bit of notoriety for our small community.

 

But that’s the least of the story. The real stories are centered in a little MFA parking lot, where the farmers pull in with their floats, almost more excited than the kids to see new and old tractors alike lit up in lights. As they step inside the store to peel off their Carhartt coats and grab a cup of coffee, conversations center on family and the weather instead of harvest, the markets, or next year’s cropping plans. The day celebrates the comradery of neighbors helping neighbors, sharing together yet another year of “doing what we love.”

windup

Across town in the city square, kids run around to stay warm, petting real reindeer, sipping hot cocoa and visiting with Santa Claus. Nearby churches have soup dinners and hot chocolate. All waiting for a little Christmas magic to come rolling by.

antlers

It’s not a “card-company” event, as AgDay Host Clinton Griffiths would say, but it sure could be one!

Have a hometown tradition in your farm community? Share your story by email sbrown@farmjournal.com.

Related Content:

5 Gifts Your Cattle Farmer Will Love

5 Gifts Your Pig Farmer Will Love

Holiday Movies Celebrate Small Town America

 

Latest News

Pinilla Joins Topigs Norsvin as Director of Technical Services
Pinilla Joins Topigs Norsvin as Director of Technical Services

Topigs Norsvin USA announces the appointment of Juan Carlos Pinilla, DVM, MS, as Director of Technical Services.

Ready for Battle: How $2.6 Million Will Help K-State Researcher Fight African Swine Fever
Ready for Battle: How $2.6 Million Will Help K-State Researcher Fight African Swine Fever

With $2.6 million in new support to fight the deadly African swine fever virus, a Kansas State University researcher is armed with new ammunition to battle one of the biggest global threats to swine production.

Free Trade Agreements are Crucial for Supply Chain Resilience, NPPC Says
Free Trade Agreements are Crucial for Supply Chain Resilience, NPPC Says

Over the past 40 years, ag exports have grown significantly, particularly to countries with which the U.S. has negotiated FTAs. That's why NPPC recently submitted comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?
How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?

“If we step back and look at what that means for farmland, we're taking our energy production system from highly centralized production facilities and we have to distribute it,” says David Muth.

Food Security is a Real Challenge
Food Security is a Real Challenge

A recent airport visit gave Chad Carr, a meat scientist at the University of Florida, a new perspective on challenges commercial food production faces with consumers.

Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid
Profit Tracker: Packer Losses Mount; Pork Margins Solid

Cattle and hog feeders find dramatically lower feed costs compared to last year with higher live anumal sales prices. Beef packers continue to struggle with negative margins.