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← Back to 2018

A package deal

by Chris Kohley
Brothers Christian (left) and Keaton McCarty operate their family-owned farms together. The brothers have farmed alongside each other since childhood. "If I had to hang out with my friends or my brother, I would honestly just hang out with my brother," Keaton says.

As he plows through a sprawling soybean field in a combine harvester, Christian McCarty’s two-way radio is buzzing. His brother Keaton, 19, is asking if the combine is ready to be emptied into his grain cart. They are a team.

“We keep each other in check,” says Christian, 22.

The McCarty brothers grew up helping their grandfather, Mike, work on his farm from as early as age 5. At age 11, each purchased his first tractor. At age 18, each purchased his own plot of land. Today, the two brothers and their grandfather work on each other’s farms, with the help of a few family friends.

Becoming a farmer was an obvious path, both brothers agree. Keaton quit the football team in high school to focus more on his farming. The long hours and weather conditions don’t faze his love for the cattle and crops. Some days end at 3 a.m.

“The job can be the most inconvenient it ever was, and you still love it,” Keaton says.

The brothers’ relationship doesn’t come without name-calling and teasing, but their chemistry is strong. “It blows my mind that two brothers can get along that well,” says Eric Davis, a family friend who helps the brothers in his free time. 

Together they work on their combined 2,000 acres of farmland, feeding cattle and harvesting corn and soybeans. Fall is the soybean-harvest season, and the brothers work tirelessly into early hours of the morning to complete all the fields. Breakfast, lunch and dinner are often eaten on the tailgate of a truck, with the headlights of the combine illuminating their meals in the dark.

For Christian, there is no better coworker than his brother. “He’s actually got some sense,” Christian says. “He understands the day to day.”

The McCarty brothers plan to stay in Mt. Sterling and continue to work on the family land. “Me and him rely on each other so much, that I don’t know what’d we’d do without each other,” Keaton says.

Christian climbs into the combine harvester before attatching the soybean head. With rain in the forecast, the McCartys work long hours to harvest as much dry soybeans as possible.
Keaton sits in the cab of the semitrailer at the Perdue Agribusiness location in Winchester to deliver soybeans. He makes the trip multiple times a week to receive payment for the harvesting.
Christian and Keaton repair a wheel on one of their tractors together. The brothers learned their mechanical and farming skills from their grandfather while growing up.
Christian McCarty bought his first tractor at age 11 and his farm at age 18. He calls himself a "black sheep" because of how young he started farming compared to others. He sees starting early as a good decision to get a head start in the industry. His younger brother Keaton followed in his footsteps and now works alongside him.
Keaton services the combine at dusk with family friend Eric Davis. When daylight disapears, the headlights of the combine are flipped on so they can continue throughout the night.
Christian and Keaton's family join them for dinner in the soybean field. Meals are often eaten between jobs in order to complete the harvest on time.
Keaton places his muddy boots on a sheet of plastic before entering Christian's home. He spent the rainy day helping his brother assemble furniture in Christian's new home.
Christian reads the manual for the washing machine in his new home. After marrying Leslie last month and with a child on the way, the couple moved into a mobile home situated on Christian's farm.
Keaton (left) and Christian share a laugh during dinner at Los Rodeos on a Friday night. The rainy day allowed the brothers to get away from the farm and spend time with their family.

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