Hundreds of tractors are rolling around the hamlet of Nowthen this weekend, and Harvey Greenberg is in his element.
Greenberg, 77, will be driving a 1946 green Oliver, one of more than 300 tractors -- including some wood-fired steam models -- that will rumble through the Nowthen Threshing Show grounds today through Sunday. Greenberg's sons and relatives will be driving some of his six other vintage tractors in the daily Parades of Power at 2 p.m.
The tractors will roar by a replica 1900 village, which includes a blacksmith, 100-year-old log cabin, general store and Milwaukee Road Depot.
Greenberg has been driving and selling tractors since he was a teenager in Burns Township, now Nowthen, about 10 miles northwest of Anoka. He's one of the main volunteers at the show, which also features antique tractor pulls.
About a half-mile from the show grounds, on Nowthen Boulevard by County Road 22, Greenberg Implements covers two corners. Greenberg still stops in every day to talk with customers and sell an occasional tractor. His two sons run the store that his father, Albin, opened in 1938 as an auto garage. Eight years later his older brother Don started a tractor line when Harvey was 15.
"I was really excited when we got our first Oliver," he recalled. Since then, he has collected seven vintage tractors, ranging from a 1934 Oliver to a 1956 Farmall.
"I liked to drive tractors," he said. "I was tractor crazy."
He started at age 13 in the 1940s when he earned 30 cents an hour disking peat land for a local farmer one summer.