Twenty-One Years, by the Numbers

Cleaning up some debris yesterday in the hoop house prior to planting peppers, I was struck by just how much we have accomplished in 21 years — 7,929 days — on the farm. We bought the property in September of 1999. At that time, the 70 acres possessed an ancient and broken perimeter fence, an industrial-size white metal barn, and a three-car garage. Partly in an effort to avoid more work, and also in a self-congratulatory mode, I sat down this morning and pulled together some numbers that reflect the time and effort we’ve invested to date.

  • 16,480 feet (3.1 miles) of perimeter fencing installed, all of which required removing the intertwined old fencing, trees, brambles and vines.
  • 8,240 feet (1.6 miles) of permanent cross-fencing added.
  • 1,648 T-posts set.
  • 248 wooden post holes dug and set three feet deep.
  • 98,880 feet (18.7 miles) of barbed wire unspooled, stretched, and attached to the posts.
  • 6,600 feet (1.5 miles) of Red Brand field fence installed.
  • 1,022 feet of hog panels erected for a 1.5-acre hog paddock in the woods.
  • 6 tractors bought, most of them long since sold.
  • 7 pickups owned.
  • 420 chickens butchered.
  • 165 pigs raised for slaughter.
  • 1,000 lambs reared.
  • 100 cattle raised.
  • 2 orchards planted.
  • 3 small grape plots planted.
  • 36 shade trees planted.
  • 23 ornamental shrubs planted.
  • 12 nut trees planted.
  • 37 farm gates hung.
  • 1 25×50’ hoop house built.
  • 5,000 garden plants set, tended, and harvested.
  • 2 farrowing huts built.
  • 6 permanent lambing stalls erected.
  • 2 hay barns constructed.
  • 1 sawmill shed built.
  • 1 wellhouse/smokehouse built.
  • 2 chicken coops built. The first and smallest now houses beekeeping and livestock health supplies.
  • 1 farm equipment shed constructed.
  • 1 potting shed built.
  • 1 workshop created.
  • 1 guest apartment created.
  • 1 house constructed.
  • 252 times that the gravel driveway (3/10 of a mile) has been graded.
  • 336 days spent bushhogging fields.
  • 126 days spent haying.
  • 3,360 hours spent working in the garden.
  • 7,929 sunrises and sunsets that have come and gone.
  • 283 full moons that have brightened the night.
  • 6 dinners enjoyed at the top of the hill.
  • 3,528 dinners eaten outside.
  • 1,126 times one of us has said to the other, “This is too much work.”
  • 7,929 times one of us has thought, What a lovely and a lucky way to live.

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Reading this weekend: the somewhat annual rereading of Beowulf (Seamus Heaney translation).

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5 thoughts on “Twenty-One Years, by the Numbers

  1. Seems to me that final number at the bottom of the list is the most consequential.

    D’ya spose any of the transient help on the farm over the years also pondered that thought?

    • No doubt, it is. And, no doubt some have considered that number. But, and just between you and me, Clem, I bet most have not considered the other numbers. However, I do. And my shoulder and back also keep track.

      • Well sure… shoulders, a back… sore legs, the occasional blister, scrape, bruise or knot on the knoggin’… those remind me to think things through before jumping into a project. And of course there are the unforeseen predicaments (the learning events, or tests of one’s patience…) so there’s seldom a dull moment in a farm life.

        Another test of the BIG choices one’s made over time – If the answer to:
        “would you trade it for something else?” is no… then remind your shoulders and sore back when they speak up – it’s all part of the bargain.

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