My sister Sarah and I write quarterly for our hometown newspaper, The Reporter-Times in Martinsville, Indiana.
We write about agriculture and share our stories and experiences from our Farm Life.
We share about passion for agriculture as we honor our dad and all our fellow farmers.
Below is our most recent article.
Enjoy and remember to, Thank A Farmer.
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It was a chilly December
Saturday on the farm. The barn lot was covered with snow and filled with
several semis, but our family didn’t own all of them. So, why were there
so many semis parked in the snow covered barn lot? While many of you were
listening to Christmas music and finishing up your shopping, our family was
trying to finish harvest. Yes, just because the seasons according to the
weather change does not mean they have changed for the farmer. Only a few
of those semis belonged to our family, the others belonged to different
farmers. Farmers who were so generous to give up their time and help our
family. This year was a bountiful harvest (the largest in our state’s
history), but it was a wet harvest. We needed more space to store the corn and
soybeans we grow in our grain bins. These farmers came with their semis to load
and haul away grain so our family could have room to store our grain in the
bins.
That day was also a familiar scene. The barn lot was full of other farmers’ semis over five years ago, the day after our father’s funeral. Some of our farmer friends came out to the farm with their semis to help take loads to a grain elevator and give a beautiful tribute to our father. It was amazing to see our farming community come together when one of their own needed help. That’s what farmers do. They give help when it’s needed. They are a generous breed.
Farmers are also
dreamers and gamblers. They dream for a perfect year that brings perfect
weather that will help yield the perfect crop. But they know that the
perfect year will never come, and yet they still take that gamble.
Farmers know that there can never be a perfect year because there is
always different types of circumstances that get in the way. Whether
those circumstances are the weather, a death of a local farmer or the
fluctuating markets, they will continue to make that gamble and strive for the
perfect harvest. And when these circumstances begin to slow them down,
others from their breed come with helping hands, and in our case, a semi too.
They give so much of their
time to their farm and their lives to the land while every season brings new
challenges but new opportunities.
Farmers live and die by
seasons, and they learn to appreciate each one of them. All four
bring their positives and negatives. Spring brings warm weather to melt
the snow and warm up the ground where the farmers plant their seeds and begin
again. They pray that a late frost doesn’t coat their crops and that rain
doesn’t flood and wash them away. Farmers’ prayers in the summer include
timely rain in June and July for the corn and in August for the soybeans.
And it shouldn’t include heat and dry weather that lasts weeks on end.
The harvest prayer is for safety in the fields, on the roads and at the
farm. Winter is a time to plan for the spring planting season, rest up a
little and spend time with fellow farmers at meetings learning about new farm
practices or how to make our farms better for our families and all those we
feed.
We aren’t saying that
farmers work harder or give back more than other professions. Well, we
might be a little biased especially during some of God’s seasons like spring
and fall. What we are saying is that they appreciate the seasons and care
for the earth they are given and the people they provide for. We were
fortunate to learn that lesson on our family farm and hope to share it with
others.
The year our father passed was also a late harvest. At times we watched snowflakes coat the corncobs that were left standing in the field. But they weren’t there long thanks to the farmers who came to help with our harvest. We are forever grateful for your friendship, commitment to agriculture and your hard working, caring hands. You are a generous and giving breed.
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