A Farming Guide to the Political Season (revisited)

Hard to believe that four years have passed since I wrote this piece. And, as in March 2016, I spent the day oversowing pastures and thinking about the political season. How little has changed. Both parties are chasing growth and both are still ignoring rural America.

Monday night we spent a couple of hours loading yearling wethers. They were destined for the slaughter the following morning. A fairly straightforward operation, Cindy pointed and I grabbed, hoisting the hundred-pound castrated ram lambs off their feet, the two of us then carrying them out of the barn. A better chute system would help, but we work with what we have today.

Wednesday night, in a rain just above freezing and a mud just below boot tops, we loaded a hog also earmarked for slaughter. We slid and stumbled in the muck, cursed and shot accusatory looks, then laughed with relief when she finally walked onto the trailer unassisted.

Thursday night, during a late season arctic blast, our newest sow farrowed 11 healthy piglets. We provided her an ample bedding of hay in an improvised stall in an open shed, adding a sheet of plywood to block the brutal north wind and a heat lamp for warmth, and, beyond providence, we trusted in the maternal instincts of an experienced mother to keep the newborns comfortable and well fed.

By Saturday the late-winter chill had begun to abate, and we were gifted with a rare sunny day and highs around 50 degrees. I spent the day crossing the smaller lamb paddocks on foot, oversowing a mix of oats, rye, and turnip seed that will hopefully provide some fast-growing early-spring forage for the sheep.

Early afternoon I took a break to help Cindy welcome 20 guests from the area Master Gardeners club. They were on hand to conduct a pruning practice in our half-acre orchard, which had been seriously neglected since the last big pruning two years ago — a pruning that is needed annually. In a short couple of hours, armed with pruning knives, loppers, and tree saws, the crew had cut away the deadwood, the water sprouts, and a host of unwanted branches.

Pruning crew gone, we retired to the front porch for a beer with friends, who afterward pitched in and helped with chores, then we all caravanned to another farm and joined in unloading some newly arrived weanling pigs.

I find that as the years go by, the rhetoric of conservatism and liberalism mean less and less to the life we live. Rhetoric aside, no candidate or party speaks for the rural farms or communities. Left or right the language is of the city: eternal growth and happy days (past, present, or future).

As a farmer I know a couple of truths. First, that the manure I sling has real value. Second, that growth is a part of a larger cycle and is never eternally sustained; that the wheel turns and winter always follows spring, summer, and fall.  

So, green grass must be carefully harvested and stored. Orchards must be pruned of deadwood, a diseased peach tree ruthlessly cut down and burned. Lambs serve a purpose and must be sold and eaten when that day comes. Sows will farrow, cute piglets will grow to 300 pounds before being butchered, and gardens will be tilled, planted, harvested, and prepared for the fallow months.

Manure needs to be conserved and used with care. Seed must be sown in order to grow. Resources must be nurtured. Infrastructure must be repaired and improved. And it is partnership and cooperation, not partisanship, that sustain connections in a rural community and on a farm.

And if adequately prepared for, the winter is traversed relatively unscathed into spring.

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7 thoughts on “A Farming Guide to the Political Season (revisited)

  1. Brian,

    Some of the best conversations I had with my Dad was when we were pitching manure into the spreader with 5 tine forks and solving the worlds problems. My Dad would say, “You know what this smells like?” And I would say NO. And he would come back with, “It smells like saving money on fertilizer.” I would chuckle, but he was dead serious. We both knew that manure is far superior for the soil than any commercial fertilizer could ever be.

    Several years ago a new neighbor offered to “take a few loads of manure off our hands”, as if he was doing us a favor. I had to educate him to the fact that manure is valuable to us, not something we needed to “get rid of.”

    The politicians serve up loads of crap, not to be confused with real manure- or real life.

    • I’ve read, somewhere, that farmer’s in England (long, long, ago) status was gauged based on the size of their manure pile in the barnyard. Sounds like you and your dad were cut from similar cloth as those farmers. We’ve also had friends call up and want a few loads of our compost for their gardens. A request that was politely refuse.

  2. Gumptious sitting room
    Surprisingly graftwood cuts
    above the forebears

    Eternally he sees
    graft above graft lining
    nothing left to a path

    I’ve finished grafting.
    Everywhere I go, in every piece if wood, all I can see is blasted grafting GRAFTS.
    Nearly a hundred holes, cheering now to be dug.

  3. Apple pie
    Anytime in July

    Fruit punch
    Great before lunch

    Apple Jack
    Don’t be holdin’ back

    Grafting a tree
    Begets these three

    Peach preserves
    Fine for the nerves

    Apricot brandy
    Ever so dandy

    Fruit from these trees
    Relies mainly on bees

    Not rhyming with fruit
    It just wouldn’t suit

    [NB, The first couplet was originally composed with – 4th of July… though in the spirit of international harmony the editor chose a less parochial farming]

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