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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

country/farm living is the best!

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BradnW

03-06-2007 22:06:09




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Hi everyone!

New to the group here but the topic is self explanatory ..

To me farming is more than a career path its a way of life for many reasons

Most of us here have a greater appreciation for the land than city dwellers and nature too for that matter .. alot of people judge us as "white trash" but in my mind thats farm from the truth! Ethanol - we grow the corn to make it, Produce - we grow it, Fall Decor (corn stalks, indian corn, pumpkins etc) - we sell it and numerous other things.

Someone in the city can say they work hard .. I'd like to see them last on a busy farm... country folks are the most determined hard working people out there and some of the nicest too! Don't get me wrong... alot of people have stressing jobs but in crunch time we have to be there physically and mentally

Also, growing up on a farm has changed most of us all... think about it...

When you were little you got to enjoy fresh things from the garden, maybe a fruit orchard and some delicious pie. As I sit here alot of people at school used to give me bull for enjoying gardening because I am a male... but how many of you do? I still enjoy spring through fall watching a small plant grow and enjoy the veggies or flowers bloom and I don't think there is one thing wrong with that! Also, it showed you a hard days work... granted my dad isn't a farmer but both sets of grandparents are and I realized how much they busted their but to do all that they do. Running through a big yard was great, I remember how cool I thought I was the first time I got to use the riding lawnmower.. I felt like I was on top of the world! Then after that came field work up till today and there is nothing like a good hard days work leaving you satisfied at the end of the day!

Now how many of you want to raise a family on a farm? I know I do! After growing up on a farm and living in town ... the saying "you can take the boy out of the country, but you can't take the country out of the boy" is so true ... anymore all I see is yuppies complaining about anything and everything and I miss the laid back atmosphere more and more each time.

It is instilled upon me to start a family on the farm - To me its the best way to grow up- you get to enjoy life a little more than city folk do and there is something to be said about a nice summer night with a bbq sitting in the grass watching the sun set drinking iced tea or lemonade

Like most of you on here you can't wait till you get that special spouse who you can sit back with and look out at the land and/or livestock.

Country life is barn parties, church on sunday morning, enjoy a cold beer in the shop with your buddies, the smell of diesel smoke or the odor of corn drying in the bin the first ripe tomatoe out of the garden, and the first pie you make when the apples are ready, pickups and gravel roads, the old barn still standing proud, tastee freezes, county fairs, tractor shows/pulls, a huge lawn, being sore after bailing hay, the smell of manure on a hot day, watching deer run when you combine - heck maybe a pheasent!

I am sure most of you will agree, your proud of where you came from, who you are, and the agriculture comunity/small town living in general!

I am darn near 21 years old and I am proud of where I came from, who I am, and the fact I picked a career path in agriculture!

--Brad

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Brad Wright of MO

03-07-2007 14:52:25




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to BradnW, 03-06-2007 22:06:09  
I agree and i also think that farming is argueably the most important job in the world. Because think about some type of soybeans or other grains are in about everything you eat. If you dont believe me just look at the ingredients. I mean that without farmers there would be no food and a lot of the products we use are usually in some way traced back to farming. Without farmers life would cease to exist as we know it. Thats why I wish farmers could make money cause i think they deserve it. Im not sayin that because im a farmer either, im a high schooler who just enjoys helpin his grandpa every summer and whenever else i can.

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mike a. tenn.

03-07-2007 15:03:38




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Brad Wright of MO, 03-07-2007 14:52:25  
brad...you have to think a little farther down the line tho. i agree that farming is very important, but could you farm today without someone building the machinery, someone to build the trucks and trains, and the drivers to drive your product to markets? even the agricultural scientists that make better yeilding, disease resistant seed to plant! you could go on and on. i don't know where you live but, if it wasn't me, it was someone just like me that helped linked the computer you're looking at right now, to a network of communication lines all over the country and the world so that you could write your message to this forum...and that's just one example of taking a good look around you and knowing what everyone else has pitched in and done, to make farming, and living on your farm better for you and your grampa.

-mike

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rrlund

03-07-2007 07:26:49




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to BradnW, 03-06-2007 22:06:09  
This isn't political,don't anybody think that it is,but here in Michigan the economy has completely colapsed. Every day another company anounces that they are leaving,we have 15% unemployment in the once thriving and growing county where I live,and God help me I love it! If I wanted to live in the city around city people with their city ways I'd move to one. Thank God in heaven we have a repreve. Homes are being abandoned,property values are tanking,realtors are giving up and aren't even going to the office. I should feel guilty for feeling this way,but nobody cried for me when the last grain elevator and last major line implement dealer closed in what is still a mostly rural county. I walk out the door every morning to do chores with a smile on my face. It is dead silent out there. No traffic on a road that 10 years ago was so bad,honest to God there were times I would give up trying to get across to the mail box. I still get homesick for the south and hate this weather,but with everybody going there and leaving here,the urge to go isn't near as strong as it used to be. I just can't tell you how light hearted I feel to be getting the rural lifestyle back after being so near to loosing it right in my own home.

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Brad in WI

03-07-2007 02:30:07




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to BradnW, 03-06-2007 22:06:09  
"Someone in the city can say they work hard .. I'd like to see them last on a busy farm..." Hey I work hard and I live in the city. No disrespect to the farming community but I consider the farm chores relaxing. And yes I do REAL chores on a working dairy farm. Being out in the fresh air and gods land. I would love to get back out in the country living but my fiance does not see having a barn full of animals in my near future.

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Brad in WI

03-07-2007 10:37:12




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Brad in WI, 03-07-2007 02:30:07  
I do want to purchase a small farm and take care of all of my friends young calves and heifers for them. But the money is not there to go and buy that property yet. still stuck in the city and hating every minute of it. I had my tractor in pieces in my garage at the apartment complex where I live until the landlord found out about it.



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mike a. tenn.

03-07-2007 10:56:12




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Brad in WI, 03-07-2007 10:37:12  
...dang landlord, must be a city feller...no appreciation for tractors.

keep workin' and savin' brad. we were stuck in the "burbs" for thirty years afore we made our escape. wife worked in the BIG city, i worked in the smaller ones, but we held onto the dream of havin' some land out in the country, and worked for it, and saved for it, and stayed as debt free as we could....and now here we are! 120 acres, half woods half hayfields...a couple ponds, a shop to work in, a barn for the chickens and tractors....but mostly peace and quiet and elbow room. (i can step out any door in my house and "water the bushes" without one neighbor bein' able to see me)

-mike

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730virgil

03-07-2007 09:13:06




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Brad in WI, 03-07-2007 02:30:07  
think twice about what you are saying. first wife wouldn't even move out of town and she grew up on farm! after she passed away i said i will not marry again if the woman is not willing to live in country. town living SUCKS! when we lived in freport nieghbor sneezed and she said bless you i said why? she said you sneezed. i siad that was merv our neighbor. that,s how close we were.



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Doug in IL

03-07-2007 05:35:13




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Brad in WI, 03-07-2007 02:30:07  
As far as hard work goes, a farmer doesn't have an exclusive on that. I've been around farmers all my life and farmed myself for over 30 years. I've done, and seen other farmers do, very hard work. I also spent 30 years around the factory. I've seen people throw D8 and D9 track shoes all day long. Sometimes in 120 degree heat. Guys loading rough stock for 3408 and 3412 engine liners from tubs to conveyors for 8 to 12 hours per day. I have seen guys straddling a narrow conveyor belt breaking the risers off hot, newly cast parts with a sledge hammer, for their entire shift. Then, when I sometimes go to the local coffee shops, I hear these farmers sitting around talking about how tough they have it and how those factory worker's all have it made. I just smile. I know that most of them wouldn't last a week on the jobs I just mentioned! Let's face it. Unless a farmer has much livestock, farming is basically a 3 or 4 months out of the year job. A lot of the bigger grain farmers really are on the corn, soybean, Florida rotation. If they have a lot of livestock, then it's a much differnt story.

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mike a. tenn.

03-07-2007 02:45:08




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Brad in WI, 03-07-2007 02:30:07  
brad in wi...i agree with you brad. even tho there's a lot of hard work to do on a farm, other jobs and work can be pretty tough too. i was a lineman for the phone co. for 30 years up near the city, i'd have liked to see bradnw follow me around for a couple days with 60+ pounds of tools in a belt huffing them up pole after pole all day long on a set of climbing hooks. i worked side by side with millworkers and construction workers all my life and what they did would compete with farm work anyday.

on the other hand, the living in the country part i have to agree with him on. now that i'm retired i have a "little farm" that i play on, i love getting back to my roots in the country just for the peace and quiet and elbow room. but lets give credit where credit is due bradnw, "here's to the hard working man no matter where he does his work!"

-mike

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RAB

03-06-2007 23:15:37




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to BradnW, 03-06-2007 22:06:09  
So what you are saying is that farming is not so much a job, more a way of life.
Regards, RAB



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Bradnw

03-06-2007 23:25:26




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to RAB, 03-06-2007 23:15:37  
That is what I am saying, alot of the younger people in my generation could care less about anything that deals with agriculture but I stand for what I believe and will always be an active volunteer/member of the comunity!



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Dave from MN

03-07-2007 04:29:26




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Bradnw, 03-06-2007 23:25:26  
I agree, that living on a farm is a great way of life, IF you can manage the stress properly, and manage smart so the stress is reduced. I managed half of a major manufacturing plant for a dew years and I must say, there are MANY city, townfolk, whatever that are just as hard working and have just as hard of jobs as many of us farmers, but with that, I have to say, getting employess (male or female) that were raised on a farm had better attendance, better quality, adjusted to the job faster, and also had alot better attitudes than non farmraised employees. When starting up a new shift or line, and us managers were allowed to do the interviewing and hiring, out "dream team" of new hires were the ones that saw the adds in rural county papers, that being said, nonfarm employees that had good attitudes, and obvious good work ethic to start with, were about as good after the ussual 30 day conditioning, cross training period. One thing bout town living I would hate, 1- any association development, not being able to decribe your place to coming visitors with anything other than your house number, because every darned house is exactly the same style and can only be one of 4 colors in the development.

Me - "just look for the big silver chicken barn with the 1/2 mile through a feild on the west side of county 25"

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flying belgian

03-07-2007 06:19:46




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to Dave from MN, 03-07-2007 04:29:26  
Statistics show best non-farm employees are farm raised females. 2nd. farm raised males. 3rd. non-farm females 4th. non-farm males.



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BradnW

03-07-2007 13:44:29




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to flying belgian, 03-07-2007 06:19:46  
Hey guys sorry about the mix up... it was late when I typed this!

I should have said blue collar vs white collar

I have been a carpenter, a mason, and a machinist so I have had some pretty demanding jobs...

It just seems to me everything is a little better in the country especially the people!



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thejdman01

03-07-2007 16:52:01




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 Re: country/farm living is the best! in reply to BradnW, 03-07-2007 13:44:29  
I know alot of factory workers who bust it all day long (foundrys etc), but many many factory workers have it pretty cooshy from tours I have taken), esp some of the union factory lines.



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