Today's vintage machinery is an obsession you were born with, enthusiasts at the weekend's Harvest Rally say.
''It's in the blood because we have been brought up with it on farms,'' Wayne Hermansen, a harvesting contractor from Dannevirke, said. ''It's a disease, you catch it from your father.'' Mr Hermansen now runs 12 John Deere tractors and trucks from his contracting business, but the obsession was planted by the end of primary school.
''Back then you weren't meant to drive a tractor until you were 12 but we learnt much earlier than that,'' he said.
Mr Hermansen said he was sad to see the old technology superseded and he did not think the design trends of new harvesting machines were going in the right direction.
''There's too much electrics in them these days. It's just that computers and electrics and dust are not compatible, and it gives a lot of trouble.''
He said the downfall of modern farm machinery was it had become too complex.
''The extra features are nice, there's no doubt about it, but of course to fix them you need a laptop.''
Hobby mechanic Rodney Smith, who has restored about 30 machines over the years, agreed.
''I know a guy who had the air-conditioning go in his tractor and the whole tractor stopped,'' he said.
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