Interesting farmers have the right away. Wonder how it is here in Indiana.
Last harvest season was headed to my parents who live on a hilly country road. Going 40 or so. Came over a hill and bam there was a combine with no spotter. Not only did he not stop, but he kept coming up the hill causing me to have to go in reverse on said blind hill. What if there was a car behind me? Who would be at fault then?
Anyways, normally I don’t have issues but I thought this was an odd situation. I felt like calling th police, but after I cooled down I just let it go. Hopefully he learned something.
Calling the police would probably have netted you a stern warning from the police officer.
Not sure what you mean by 'spotter'. No one I know of (including myself)has ever had a spotter going to and from fields. Not required or necessary. It's up to you as the vehicle driver to be cognizant of approaching powered farm equipment. Believe me, the operator (myself included) have all we can do just staying on the road and watching out for inconsiderate vehicle drivers.
Try motoring an excessive overwidth piece of ag equipment costing hundreds of thousands of dollars down a narrow 2 lane road. Takes a lot of concentration to just do it without worrying about what a car does.
Most operators (myself included) will yield to traffic when we have the room to pull over (like an intersecting road) but that don't always present itself in a reasonable time frame so you, as a car driver have to extend some courtesy to us, the ag equipment operators.
I get that 'me too. I need to get there fast crap' every year. I've become immune to it in reality. If you are in that big of a hurry have at it but, you go in the ditch, it's your baby, not mine. I just call the local LE and let them deal with it, something I've done before and will probably do again.
So long as I'm properly placarded (SMV) on the tractor and implement and running with my emergency flashers on, I'm 100% legal and the burden to yield to my movement lies with you. Like I said, every farmer I know of will yield to traffic when we can. Called courtesy.
Had a kid wind up in the pucker bush trying to get around me a few years ago. Couldn't wait. I stopped the tractor, got out on the step and looked back. He was in the ditch but appeared ok. He was busy cussing me out. I chuckled and called 911 and gave them the location and explained to the dispatcher what had occured, got back in the tractor and went about my business. When I came back through that evening, the car was gone. I presumed he got a ticket and had to pay for a wrecker as well.
You play chicken with a farm tractor that weighs 3 times as much as your car does and add in an implement and it's weight as well, you will always lose.