Ursus C330 May 2026
In the rolling hills of Podlasie, the morning mist usually broke not for the sun, but for the rhythmic chug-chug-chug of Marek’s . To the neighbors, it was just "The Thirty," a small, yellow-and-gray machine that looked more like a toy next to the modern, glass-cab giants on the larger estates.
Marek drove his C330 to the edge of the pit. The villagers laughed—it looked like a terrier trying to pull a bull out of a well. Marek just smiled, engaged the , and let the 2-liter diesel engine find its steady, low-end grunt. Ursus C330
But for Marek, the Ursus was family. It had been his father’s, bought with years of saved zlotys. While other tractors were hauled away on trailers when their computer chips fried, the C330 never quit. One afternoon, a heavy rain turned the valley's main access road into a river of deep, clay-thick mud. A sleek, high-horsepower foreign tractor, trying to rush a load of grain to the silo, became hopelessly bogged down, its massive tires spinning fruitlessly until it sank to the axles. In the rolling hills of Podlasie, the morning