A Farmer’s Earth Day Story

  Today is Earth Day.  A day that since 1970 has been celebrated as a day to recognize efforts to reduce waste.  While it started as a movement against water waste and improved air quality, it has turned into a day when everyone can take the time to plant a tree, pick up some litter, and make more of an effort to recycle. So what does a farmer like me think about on Earth day…the phrase “Every day is Earth Day for Farmers & Ranchers” tends to come to mind.  So here is this farmer’s Earth Day story…

If you ask me to plant a tree, I would smile, because last year I planted 500.

If you asked me to just wait until they get bigger and think of all the oxygen they will produce.  I would smile again and point to the 10,000 trees that this farm has planted in the past 20 years.


If you asked me to help with soil erosion, I would smile and point to the crops we have growing on hillsides to keep the soil where it’s meant to be.

If you ask me what I’m doing to help our precious bees.  I would smile and mention the acres and acres of food that I create for bees every year.


If you asked me to help keep our water clean, I would smile and point to the grass that we grow, which filters not only soil but pesticides and fertilizer.

If you asked me to decrease emissions, I would smile and point to our GPS equipment that helps us do more with less. 

If you asked me how I know our farm is sustainable, I would smile and introduce you to the 4th generation on our farm.  A small boy who is already learning what it means to take care of the land.If you asked me to celebrate just one day where we took care of the earth, I would smile because quite frankly as farmers we have been doing that forever.

The legacy of helping the earth didn’t start for my family on this land in 1970 along with Earth Day.  It started the day that my grandpa took a handful of soil and decided to start growing food and fiber for people all over the world.  And it continues now, decades of knowledge of how to take care of what God has given us, along with technology to continue improving on that legacy for generations.  So yes today on Earth Day I’m smiling, because when I look around, it’s true that this land is our office and our home.  This land is where we sweat, cry, and rejoice.  We are here to protect this land on Earth day and every day!

To read another blog from another farmer check out this one! 

Earth Day Thoughts from a “Modern” Farmer. https://daughterofatrucker.com/2016/04/18/earth-day-thoughts-from-a-modern-farmer/

Our Little FarmerĀ 

  
Just something about…a farm boy and his John Deere. #Farmlife

Happy Friday!

Photo credit to my dad, also known as Papa. 

Family Farming

Ā It’s not everyday that we get to take our kids out on the farm with us.Ā  It’s hard, as any of you with a toddler can imagine, to get much done with a 4 month old and an almost 2 year old tagging along.Ā  But one thing that is pretty easy is looking at fields, because who doesn’t love wide open spaces to run and dirt to play in?!

IMG_2851Hoot and I checking on a cabbage field when he was only 8 months old.

Hoot in his short life so far has probably looked at acres of dirt and more rows of crop than most adults.Ā  He’s been a trooper from the very beginning, and in many ways I think it’s because, well, he just doesn’t know any different.

Ā Last Sunday Matt and I needed to go look and see how our spring wheat was growing.Ā  So we loaded up the boys and took them out to walk fields with us.Ā  Although Hoot didn’t last too long….

Ā Davor was a happy camper the whole adventure!

Ā When it’s said that farming isn’t just a job, it’s a way of life.Ā  I think experiences like these are what they are talking about.Ā  It didn’t matter that it wasn’t a “workday”, it didn’t matter that we had our kids in tow, all that mattered is that fields needed to be checked and we got it done.Ā  This wasn’t our kids’ first and it won’t be their last “family farming” time, this is how farming gets into your blood, this is how you continue a legacy.