Friday, June 29, 2012

If You Need Anything...


I have found myself thinking a lot about farmers in recent days.  Several things have contributed to these thoughts.  Certainly our recent purchase of a farm, in addition to harvesting my own seeds this year, has had an impact.  I think another contributing factor has been meeting our new neighbor.  I affectionately refer to him as “Farmer Bob and his dog Earl”.  You can’t make that stuff up!  His name is Bob and he does have a dog named Earl.  Our new neighbor has been incredibly gracious and a great example of what a good neighbor should be.  Just this week, he came over and cut down several acres of waist high grasses and weeds, so my hubby could get a leg up on his new grass cutting duties.  Bob quickly reminds me how I need to work on my own neighboring skills.

I’ll never forget, as a child, when my own grandfather died on our farm.  As dairy and vegetable farmers, we had a well in front of the milk house that contained chemicals drained off while farming.  In the 60’s and 70’s, those were a lot more chemicals than are used today.  We’ve learned so much about our environment, and our own health, and the impact.  A company would come every so often and clean out the well with a big hose connected to a tanker truck.  They would suck it out and go down the lane out back of our 40 acres and empty the chemicals into the soil of the woods.  Crazy, I know.  But that was the process back then.  It would often take a couple loads to fully empty the well. 

This day, the tanker was being emptied in its usual manner when my grandfather remained near the edge of the well in waiting.  With loose rocks around the edge, my grandfather slipped and either fell into the well after being knocked out by the rocks on the edge, or blacked out soon after entry into the well from the chemicals within it.  When the tanker driver returned, he valiantly tried to save my grandpa by jumping in.  Soon thereafter, a helping hand on the farm also jumped in to assist.  The first man died, leaving behind a young wife and children.  The second struggled for many years due to the effects physically from the chemicals and mentally from the event. 

The rest of that day/week is still surreal to me today.  I was twelve.  I will soon be 49.  It feels like yesterday.  Neighbors began arriving as the news spread.  Cows still needed milking that evening.  Straw still needed to be cut later that afternoon.  Hay still needed to be baled, and vegetables still needed to be hoed.  No one had to ask.  No one had to make calls and line up a schedule.  Farmers knew what needed to be done and simply did it… for days… for weeks, actually… until we had a handle on what life was going to be like on the farm without grandpa at the helm. 

I also remember the food.  Food showed up like clockwork every day… breakfast, lunch and dinner.  No one called and said “If you need anything, please… just let us know… “  They just did whatever needed to be done.  My mother is eldest of six.  My grandmother had died four years earlier of an asthma attack and had left behind a five year old child, two high school youth, and three young adult children.  Plus there was my brother and I who practically lived there, as well.  We were all in need. 

I hear on the news about milk legislation, commodity prices, and weather reports and with each report I say a prayer for our farmers.  It is so easy to forget who they are, what they do, and how much we rely on them.  They are often the silent and the committed, the dedicated and the overworked.  As you begin to cut up some veggies this week, grill up some burgers, or pour some rich, pure, refreshing milk over your crispy, mulit-grain cereal, say a prayer for all the Farmer Bobs and their dogs named Earl.  Pray for their safety in one of the most dangerous professions out there.  Pray for strength as they work harder than most any of the rest of us.  And pray for their families, who more often than not, sacrifice more than we can ever imagine.  Most of all, pray that the rest of us would learn a thing or two about being a better neighbor, ourselves.  

Monday, June 18, 2012

Down on the Farm


Well it looks like we finally bought the farm.  No, we didn’t purchase a burial plot or crash a plane onto a farmer’s lot (two original uses for the term).  We actually bought the farm.  As a United Methodist pastor, there are many benefits. We are encouraged to use a prophetic voice, we are given much freedom to be creative, and we are appointed to an entire community, not just the members of the local church.  But one of the detriments of being a UM pastor is retirement.  When it’s all said and done, everyone celebrates your ministry just before saying, “Where are your keys?... and can you be moved out within 30 days please?” 
Most of our churches provide what is called a parsonage, a church owned house.   This way, when the Bishop calls with a new appointment, there isn’t a house to sell first.  You just pack up and go.  The bad thing is, when retirement comes along, you’re homeless.  Literally.  You are without a home.  And who wants to apply for a mortgage at age 70? 

So my husband and I have been looking for the past couple of years.  Both our kids have bought houses and we were hoping to be someone close enough to continue being involved in their lives.  We also wanted a place that might entice our children/grandchildren to come visit as often as possible.  We felt that easily narrowed to finding a home on a lake or on a farm.  We figured either one would be a draw for little ones. 

After seeing several places that were just kind of hum ho, we ran into this farm.  The house was built in 1890 and has good, solid bones.  The floors are all natural oak, along with all the interior and exterior doors, window and floor trim.  It’s amazing none of the oak has ever been painted.  It’s also amazing carpet has never been installed anywhere in the house.  All the door knobs are original and some of the light fixtures are pretty old, as well. 

It sits on 5 acres of hardwoods and meadows.  There are 5 outbuildings, including a three story hip roof barn, a 2 story screened pavilion with decks, an 8 stall horse barn, a ceramic tiled art gallery, and a studio complete with a wall of south facing windows.  A photographer last owned the property.  But I have to admit, as incredibly awesome as all those things are, what I love the most is a little more abstract.  I love simply being there.  When I pull in the driveway, I feel as though I have gone back in time and have become a child again.  As a child I would arrive at my grandparents’ farm the last day of school and wouldn’t return to my mother until the first day of school the following year.  My brother and I spent every moment we could there.  We created forts in the straw mow, had tomato fights that left welts, and puddle stomped wearing my grandfather’s pants and a baler twine belt.  Baseball games could happen in a drop of a hat and climbing to the top of the silo was a goal we all had before any of us reached puberty. 

There’s something said about turning off the electronics and returning to a life of physical labor, livestock aromas, and summer breezes swaying through the tree tops.  My grandfather died in an accident on the farm when I was 12.  Just a few years later the farm was auctioned off and I haven’t really set foot on one since.  Until now.  It’s nice to be home.