CA and I argued over the best way to utilize the wheat that we planted just to keep the hillside from eroding over the winter because the beans didn't come out until almost October and everyone said that that was too late to plant grass seed then. Well, except for my dad who didn't chime in on the subject until after it was too late to plant the grass seed and use the wheat to protect it. Which was brilliant, and would have worked SWIMMINGLY, but we didn't know.
Dad also suggested using a slit seeder to plant the grass over the wheat, but no one that I could find had one big enough to plant 40 acres with; but that was okay because Mark (the professional farmer who rents my parent's row crop ground) said that what we really needed to do was frost seed it anyway. Which was great, except that you do that in January, and it was February already; oh and BTW, didn't you know? You really need to plant grass seed in August, not the spring. And definitely not just disk up the wheat and plant it in grass like I had discussed with him in the fall.
So, CA and I are staring at the lovely wheat field with tiny baby grass and clover being choked out by the foot high wheat and we get the idea to hay it since using it as pasture would hurt the new grass. (Which I have to baby the shit out of because it was planted too late.) So we think about, and agree that haying it is the way to go. Even though neither of us has ever seen anyone bale wheat before as anything other than straw. The farmer's hereabouts usually either let it go and harvest it or spray it with a desiccant and plant over it.
It is April and too wet to technically hay it, so we will have to rent or borrow someone's equipment to "haylage" it. Which is where you take wet grass and bale it, and then wrap it in plastic wrap to let it ferment and become silage. It requires heavier duty balers as well as a special bale wrapper. So I call up Mark and ask him if he knows anyone who might be able to rent our their equipment or possibly just pay to bale and wrap it.
And wouldn't you know? According to Mark wheatlage is great for cows and the dairy he used to work at always made wheatlage. But he hadn't shared that information with me previously, I guess presuming that I knew with some innate farmer wisdom in my blood that wheatlage would be cow crack. I didn't spend weeks thinking I must be crazy, because I had never seen this done before. No, not at all. That didn't happen.
You know, everyone talks about the barriers to entry of farming and they always talk about how damned expensive it is or how hard land is to get, and that is 100% true; but sweet mother of God what about this awesome pool of knowledge that isn't being shared?
I read articles where authors are chastising my generation of farmers for treating permaculture and other farming practices as things that they just discovered and I get it. We are a bunch of egotistical millennials. Perhaps we do have a lofty idea of ourselves, but do you want to know why we feel like we just discovered the best farming practice ever? That we must be the originator? Because no one is telling us about them. In many cases we are having to constantly reinvent the wheel, and we shouldn't be.
I have grown up on a farm. I have great mentors and resources at my disposal and I still feel like I am having to pass some sort of weird initiation where all these older farmers are testing my farming instincts in order to give access to their knowledge. I can't even imagine how hard it is for my peers who haven't been blessed with that background. It seriously wouldn't surprise me if I happen to slop my way up a mountain sized pile of cow manure to talk to some old timer about my sea kelp research only to have him tell me that it is great and he has been using it since 1975. Well h-e-double hockey sticks, why didn't I know that already?
All humor aside though fellas, I know you're not doing this on purpose; but please realize that "you don't know what you don't know" and the next generation of farmers needs you to teach us. Desperately. Yes, some of us (myself included) have weird a$$ ideas about grassfed, and organics; but those things don't change the basic knowledge that you can share. We need you to have a conversation with us. When we tell you in September that we want to plant grass seed, instead of just saying that it is to late, tell us about cover crops that could work. Or try something like, "Hey, you know cows, but you don't know much about row cropping. You just said you are worried about erosion, have you thought about this annual crop (corn/soy/sudan grass/freaking rutabagas) that we could plant after the winter wheat; but have out before August so that you can plant the grass for your future hayfield in the best time frame? I know you want forage for the cows. How about wheatlage? Cows freaking LOVE wheatlage."
And you guys and gals, the next generation, my generation? Don't discount others just because they're using Round-Up and spreading nitrogen. Don't turn off your ears the minute you hear row-crop. They have been doing this a long time and just because they don't farm the way you and I do/want to doesn't mean that they don't know what they are doing, or that all of their knowledge is somehow flawed. It is time that we all stepped up to the table and swapped stories. The agriculture community as a whole will be much better off because of it if we do.
Me? I think I'm going to start hanging out at the local Farm Bureau's pinochle night, or maybe Hardee's at breakfast, and hope that I might overhear something new. If nothing else at least the great wheatlage debacle of 2017 did do one thing. It showed me how much I don't know.
Showing posts with label farmer's daughter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farmer's daughter. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
Morning Ruminations...
When I was in high school I absolutely HATED getting up an
extra hour early so that I could feed and water horses before I went to class.
There were even mornings that I would feed everyone and then take a nap in the
tack room while they were eating. I am pretty sure that there is still a cup
and spoon in there from where I ate my cereal on the fly and washed it out, but
could spare there extra two minutes to walk it back to the house because that
would mean getting up two minutes earlier.
While I’m still bad about not changing shoes after I feed,
much to the chagrin of my housekeeper – me, I have found myself greeting the
mornings with a lot more ardor lately. Why may that be?
Well, the majority of the cows now live in Illinois! Can I
get a whoo hoo?
That was an ordeal in and of itself. The highlights?
Watching a calf magically turn boneless and wriggle under the catch pen like a
gigantic furry eel. Roping the same calf with the skill of a kindergarten
mutton buster and trying desperately to hold onto him long enough for CA to
move the trailer into place so he could ship with his mama. It was like a bad
version of Gulliver’s Travels – the lariat wound around my legs and threatened
to topple me over while I was hauling back on an enraged calf that was lunging
away from me like a hound of hell. I’m pretty sure he turned into the Hulk.
Like 90% sure. He should not have been that strong… And then there is 32, also
known affectionately as “Hateful B!tch.” HB got that nickname from the guy at
the sale barn, and boy, has it proven to be true. Not only did she run through
panels a few times to escape the move. She ran through me, kicked me as she
went by, and then sailed over three fences with skills that I have seen 17 hand
thoroughbred hunter jumpers envy. I wasn’t sure if I should be pissed, or just
impressed honestly. I’m still not. Thank God she jumped in with the neighbor’s
herd. It took them a couple days to catch her and even then she tried to go
through people, 6” gaps between trailers, trailer windows… you know, anything. She
charges the side of the trailer if I walk by. She has an appointment with the
processor because I’m not sure that any fence we have will hold her, and I don’t
really want to have calves that are that crazy. Plus, you know what they say:
hate is the best sauce… that B is going to be delicious.
Anywho, now that the cows live over here it means I have an
hour of watering to do over at my grandpa’s place before I go to work in the
morning. I am consistently surprised that I love it. I don’t know what happened
to 14 year old me and my avoiding getting up early for any reason, because here
I am sitting on a rock pile SnapChatting cow pictures to my friends as I wait
for the troughs to fill.
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| When your friend posts a picture because they look good (Panda), and don't really care about how dumb you look (Bertha Mae). |
Now if only I could make myself use chore boots. I still freaking
hate vacuuming. Perhaps I’m not so different than I was at 14 after all.
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Wednesday, March 9, 2016
The cows are sorted!
According to my FaceBook newsfeed, yesterday was
International Women’s Day.
I never really considered myself a feminist, but I am coming
to realize that that is because I grew up in a small bubble where I never had
any reason to. I have been fortunate enough to be surrounded by strong female
figures, especially my mother who never let “That’s a man’s job!” be a thing.
There was never “men’s work” or “women’s
work” there was always just work. When we would square bale she was always out
stacking the bales as my dad threw them. She was the one who would correct
dystocias if a horse or cow had one. Heck, she’s the one who would run the
2,500 lb bull into the head catch to doctor him when he got a wire cut around
his nethers that swelled him up as big as a softball so he couldn’t retract it,
and the vet said we might as well put him down. Soaking it in Epsom salt and
covering it in cut heal twice a day made him so hateful towards her that he
tried to kill her every time he saw her, but she did fixed him. She also helped
load that big ole boy in the trailer when we had to ship him. Ungrateful
sucker. She is the one who runs the family business (as president) and self-taught
herself everything from veterinary medicine to accounting whilst keeping the
house clean and the grass cut, and clearing a fence row or two with her
chainsaw.
In short, I’ve been incredibly lucky to rarely see the
discrimination against girls that I read about online. I never watched Disney
movies and thought that I need a prince to come rescue me, or thought that all
I was meant to be was a Barbie doll. I always knew that I could be an engineer,
or a farmer, or a whatever the hell I wanted to be if I wanted to and worked at
it. I’m beginning to see how incredibly lucky I was with that.
Case in point, CA and I helped a friend of his work cows the
other week, and even though I was probably the one there with the most
experience moving cows I got the “girl job” of record keeping. And I resented the
hell out of it. Well, I should have known better than to open my big mouth
because as we were working cows last night I got the “girl job” again. As in, I
was the only one in the pen herding the little buggers. What can I say? My
family doesn’t discriminate. Mom, Dad, and CA all stood outside the pen (read
as: not A$$ deep in mud) and encouraged the calves towards the trailer while I
waded around in the muck and hit them in the butt with a stick. It was glorious.
Until one of them went cray-cray and I fell down and almost got trampled to
death. Damn heifer. At that point CA jumped over the fence to help corral the
crazy one to get her gone. I am super grateful for the help.
I think that’s one reason that farming appeals to me, at the
end of the day I think mom and dad were right – there isn’t "my work", "your work", "his work", "her work"; there is just a job to be done, and you work together to get it that way. It is a great equalizer.
So, happy belated Women’s Day, and I hope you don't have as much rain and mud as we do right now!
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| Hey guys, the cows are sorted! |
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
I think I'm just a farmer.
I just saw a Facebook post about: "Is the term'Farmer's Wife' outdated in 2015?" And while, no, I don't think it is.
That is something that has been bothering me. There has been a big push to
recognize women in farming lately; and I get it, but at the same time I don't. I've
grown up a farmer's daughter. I have believed that I would be a farmer's wife. But
I am both of those things, and neither of them. I'm a farmer in my own right.
When push comes to shove it isn't going to be just my future husband and
hypothetical sons out there working. I will be too. I already am. And you had
better damn well know that any daughter I have will be too. If she is efficient
enough to do it in a sundress, who am I to say no? She'll be doing her own dang
laundry though.
But that wouldn't make her less of a farmer. And it
doesn't make me less of one.
Why haven't I embraced it? Why haven't I stopped being a
farmer's daughter and taken my mantle of farmer and worn it with flair? Because
, let's face it, bedazzle that B***** because I'm rocking it already. I'm
wondering how many of you are in the same boat. Am I the only one?
When the fence is down, who fixes it? Sometimes I do.
When the cows are out, who threatens them with death and
curses until they go back where they belong? Sometimes I do.
When there is a cow having birthing problems, who is
shoulder deep in her lady parts trying to save the calf? Sometimes I am.
When the fields need brush hogged, who is out there
working on their tan? Sometimes I am.
When it comes time to work cows, who face plants in all
the cow mud? Me. Right here. This girl.
Pretty much always. I'm a clutz like
that.
When there is anything going on with the farm, who is
involved? Sometimes I am.
You know what, just because I have to preface those
things with "sometimes" doesn't make me any less of a farmer than my
dad (who sometimes, okay, frequently isn't around!). It also doesn't make me
less of a farmer than my friends who work day jobs and farm on the evenings and
weekends. They are only farming "sometimes" too. And you know who
else is "sometimes" farming? Their wives.
Most of the row croppers I know have wives that can drive
a tractor, or pull wagons to get the harvest in. They feed bottle calves, chickens,
children, and hungry husbands. They handle mowing or watering, or whatever they
have to do when their loved ones are occupied elsewhere. A few of them are even
stay home wives and get the great jobs of riding around the county looking for
the missing cows that broke out of the fence, because "they didn't have to
work." Hah. Right. Because in addition to taking care of all the things
that you don't have time to, they can whip up a church picnic worthy cake in
the blink of an eye. Who says that isn't work? I'm frankly in awe of their
level of awesome.
Guess what gals, you aren't just farmers wives or
daughters. According to the dictionary, you're farmers. "A person who
owns, or manages a farm." "A person who cultivates land or crops, or
raises livestock." Bottle feeding calves is raising livestock. It's really
freaking cute livestock. And technically I think farm kids could count as
livestock if push comes to shove. Goodness knows that you have a hard time separating
them from the livestock in many cases! ;)
Now, I'm not trying to go all "girl power" on
you, but seriously, let's give ourselves the respect we deserve.
Because we are awesome, and we are farmers.
But I guess we are more than that too, and if THAT is
what "farmer's daughter", "farm wife", or "farmer's
wife" means to you then I get it; but I should start making "Farm
goddess" t-shirts, 'cause what you guys do just isn't humanly possible.
PS: If any of you feel like taking a lowly farmer under
your wing and telling me your church cake recipe, or how on earth you manage to
look that nice and still walk on actual dirt please feel free! God knows I
could use the help! :D
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