"Unfortunately Of the teens I know living on working farms right now I know of none that intend on staying on the farm."
It doesn't matter if they do farming forever. It is fine that as they grow, they develop intersts in other fields. I don't expect my children to farm for a living, yet, I want them to learn that whatsoever their hands find to do... That means that when they are working in the garden, they do their best. When they feed the chickens, they do so faithfully, and when the time comes, and they sit in the House of Representatives, maybe, just maybe, they will preform those duties with the same integrity. Perhaps when our children are managing some Enron of tomorrow, they might feel the same compulsion to do what is required that they learned doing their milkings faithfully. How would things be different if adults had learned that hard work leads to a bountifull harvest, instead of learning that government is there to give them what they want? Whether they farm for a living or not is not something that matters. I believe in the deepest part of my soul that if young people were to learn what they can only learn from farming, they would be far more prepared for their adult lives. How many people would support euthinasia or abortion if they had grown up watching eggs become chicks, and chicks become chickens, or helped a cow birth a difficult calf? How many fund managers would be so flipant and irresponsible with their costumers money if they had had to earn their money by throwing hay bales in the hot summer with straw and sweat mixing on their back? In every field of employment America seriously needs people who understand agriculture, who have learned the lessons that can not be learned in a classroom.
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Today's Featured Article - Choosin, Mounting and Using a Bush Hog Type Mower - by Francis Robinson. Looking around at my new neighbors, most of whom are city raised and have recently acquired their first mini-farms of five to fifteen acres and also from reading questions ask at various discussion sites on the web it is frighteningly apparent that a great many guys (and a few gals) are learning by trial and error and mostly error how to use a very dangerous piece of farm equipment. It is also very apparent that these folks are getting a lot of very poor and often very dangerous advice fro
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