Posts Tagged With: Barn

Friederick’s Farm

For a few short days during mid summer, I can watch the sun set directly over the former Friederick farm from our place across the valley.  It’s buildings and silos looming as a landmark on the horizon. A tribute to the many working farms that have went the way that our local coops have. The little feed mills and main street farm stores have long since vanished from our lives. The little dairy farms that dotted our rural country roads and made our local economy thrive will soon be as extinct as the dinosaurs.

Many of the farms have been fragmented by severing the homesteads from the land they once served and sold as farmettes. Our woodlots are now referred to as recreation land and taxed accordingly.

Not many years ago if one needed emergency help it was just a short drive up the road. If you didn’t find anyone at the house or barn you would just drive out in the fields and you could find somebody. Help assisting a first calf heifer giving birth was a common emergency. Sometimes you would need someone with a much bigger tractor to pull you out of a mud hole, that you thought was just a wet spot that turned into a bottomless pit.

A short time ago during one of our wet springs, I got stuck in a seep in one of our fields and I had to call my wife at work and she came home and pulled me out of the mud while wearing her long dress.

Yes, things have changed across America’s heartland and as I now look at the Friederick farm standing on the West Ridge, I see a lifetime of hard work, dedication, and a way of life suspended like so many others in a transitions zone of what once was and the new age of high tech agriculture.

Yep! I think we all miss our old neighborhoods.

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Cow on the Roof

What a surprise I got one afternoon when I walked out of the house and seen one of our Holstein Cows on the roof of the hog house. She was standing there posed like a hood ornament. Years ago this type of buildings were very common on farms as most every farmer milked cows, had hogs, chickens and sheep. Small farms were versified to survive back then. Cows hoofs were not designed for climbing. How the cow jumped up there is a mystery and that’s the only time she ever did it.

Interesting as well is all the clutter of old boards lying around. After my folks bought the farm, it took years to get it all cleaned up. Most of it I guess was from the many old dilapidated buildings falling apart. When I was young I stepped on nails four times. My right foot still shows the affects of one nail. My mother thought I must of had a magnet in my foot.

On the back of the photo shows the year 1968, my sophomore year in high school. Two years later I began my career as a full time dedicated farmer and conservationist. I bought my first farm at the age of 21 and was married shortly after my 23rd birthday. We’re still here today living and farming in the Big Platte Valley.

 

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Sparky vs. a cow named Nuisance

Sometimes Sparky could be a good source of entertainment. One cold December day we were cleaning the steer lot. This one particular steer, we called Nuisance. For some reason Nuisance always wanted to play games with us. He trained us to expect it. He was a problem child since the day he came to the farm. Every time we went through the gate with the tractor, he would make his break for the gate. He wouldn’t run very far, only about 40 feet then he would just stand there and make us put him back in while trying to keep the rest of the cattle from coming out. This particular day was no different. We were ready to drive out of the lot, so we checked to see where Nuisance was. With all the other steers in the lot, we really weren’t sure where he was so we made a run for it. Before Sparky could get the gates shut Nuisance beat him to the draw. The day before it had snowed and the wind had blown drifts around the corners of the buildings. Nuisance stopped and stood at his usual spot. The other steers in the lot were eying the open gate. Nuisance was eying Sparky. Sparky was trying to calculate whether he could run around Nuisance and chase him back through the gate before the other steers decided to make their move. I was ready to jump off the tractor and help if needed however I could tell Sparky was actually thinking this situation out. To get around Nuisance, Sparky had to run around a round bale of hay and through hip deep snow in between the bale and the corn crib a few feet away. From the tractor cab it looked like a game of chess.

Sparky made his move and went running around the hay bale, hit the snow drift, lost his balance running into the bale then back across to the corn crib back through the drift and into the bale again before regaining his balance. He looked like he was stuck inside a pin ball machine. Nuisance just stood there casually watching this spectacle and then casually walked back to his pen looking totally satisfied with himself. This made my day! I was still laughing about it when I went to bed that night.

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True Story…I can’t make this stuff up

One of my first jobs I gave my hired man, Sparky was to nail the floor boards down on a loft we were putting in the old barn. The joist were already in place, so thinking it was impossible to mess up, I left Sparky to the task as I went on to other chores. An hour later, I came back to check on Sparky and noticed nails sticking down through the boards every where not even hitting the joist. I asked how can you miss them when you can see them. Frustrated I left again scratching my head. Later I returned and to my surprise not another nail had missed the joist. I asked what happened. To this Sparky replies; I figured out that if the nail drives in hard all the way then it hit the joist. (Important tip for all you contractors)

Even a simple task such as having Sparky digging a post hole can turn into a disaster. How can anyone mess up digging a hole you may ask! For Sparky it comes natural. The post hole was to be dug to replace a post into the corral. I had already cut the length of the boards which was shortened to accommodate the wider gate in the fence. I even started digging the post hole so nothing could go wrong. All Sparky had to do was dig a hole 10” diameter straight down to 3 feet deep. To this task, I now left Sparky unattended. An hour later I returned to find Sparky still not done digging. How deep is the hole I asked? Looking at me like my bubble was slightly off center, he replays; All the way to the bottom. I had left the chain saw setting close by and the ends of the fence boards were bothering him so he cut about 8” off the boards. Now the boards couldn’t reach the post. We couldn’t move the post as it had to accommodate the gate. I ended up finishing the hole, setting the post, and then I had to nail 2X6 boards on the side of the post to nail the corral boards to. Sparky claimed that this would make the fence much stronger. (Important tip for all you engineers)

 

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