Brand Whores.
His one failure to stick the farmer creed of choosing a brand to defend is the most obvious category of farmer argument: trucks. He simply doesn't care. They all eat too much gas and fall apart. Right now it's an old 4x4 Dodge, but not in the same way that all the neighbor's friends all drive Dodges. If Honda had built trucks in America 10 years ago, it would be no question. But no American manufacturers have yet figured out how to make long-term reliability standard.
Recently I've been putting effort forth to see if I concur with the decision to buy Stihl to cut things up. Chainsaw chains are a pain in the ass to sharpen well. So I'll put that one off till later. My dad warned me that cutting brush for more than an hour would hurt. A lot.
He was right, but only because when his shoulder straps broke in four different places, he tied two breaks together with wire and kept using the damn thing. When you trample though brush for an hour with a dead albatross hanging from your neck, you get old prematurely.
So I postponed the brushcutting too. Till today. Bought a new shoulder strap. And it works like it's supposed to.
Conclusion: Stihl is worth the extra monies when you have acres of nasty things that need to be shortened (multiflora rose, too tall children, vegetables, small trees). I have those acres.
What is 'Brush'? I suppose in the 1800s it referred to all the small growth ferns and bushes and weeds that would grow up along the hard to mow fencelines and edge of woods. Now it's just one plant, multiflora rose. If you didn't cringe when you read that, you haven't met one. It's exactly what it's Latin suggests, a member of the rose family with multiple flowers. But it's flowers are ugly. And they last for about a week. And the stemmy thorny practically tree-like stem is left for the rest of the year to stab anyone foolish enough to walk near it. It's not native to America. Some schmuck from Asia brought it over as a rose. Some knuckleheaded gov't agent told the farmers that it would make a great natural fence. So they planted it. And birds ate and pooped the seeds all over the Midwest.
I seem to have drifted off topic.
In conclusion [<---funny], farmers are brand whores. Which can at times make my life easier. Thanks advertising!
Wait, no, that's not right, I mean thanks better products!