Author Topic: Life on the Farm  (Read 518836 times)

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Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1530 on: November 07, 2025, 03:17:09 pm »
Moonrise
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise

Offline Pat B

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1531 on: November 08, 2025, 02:08:51 am »
Nice full moon for harvesting. Glad to hear you had a good year. I imagine your crop diversity helps to keep it all in balance.
 Thanks for your service to America, Brian.  :OK
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!    Pat Brennan  Brevard, NC

Offline WhistlingBadger

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1532 on: November 08, 2025, 10:55:39 am »
Glad things are going well, BJ.  I always enjoy hearing about the goings on out there.  Is that corn getting made into silage?  Nasty smelling stuff, but the cows sure seem to enjoy it.
Thomas
Lander, Wyoming
Arise!  Kill, and eat!

Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1533 on: November 08, 2025, 11:45:20 am »
Thanks Pat. I really do like the diversity of our crops. It keeps it interesting and challenging. I am really enjoying the cover crops now too. They are definitely another challenge. I’m so thankful I am where I am. I feel like it’s where I was meant to be.

Bjrogg
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise

Offline Pappy

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1534 on: November 08, 2025, 07:55:23 pm »
Beautiful moon, glad you are having such a good harvest, fall is always busy for the farmers around here also, spring and fall got almost more than they can do and summer and winter plenty to do just not as hectic. Good luck on you hunting when time allows. Pappy
Clarksville,Tennessee
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Life is Good

Offline chamookman

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1535 on: November 09, 2025, 05:12:20 am »
Nice Pics Bud ! Snow on the ground this Morning  (A)(=) Bob
"May the Gods give Us the strength to draw the string to the cheek, the arrow to the barb and loose the flying shaft, so long as life may last." Saxon Pope - 1923.

Offline Pappy

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1536 on: November 09, 2025, 09:39:05 am »
Calling for snow flurries here tomorrow, a little early for us but have seen snow on Halloween . :) :)
 Pappy
Clarksville,Tennessee
TwinOaks Bowhunters
Life is Good

Offline Burnsie

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1537 on: January 12, 2026, 08:42:18 pm »
Just found this thread - I'll be following and hopefully contribute.

Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1538 on: Today at 07:20:45 am »
Glad you found it Burnsie. I haven’t added anything to it for awhile now since harvest. Was thinking of updating it but nothing really glamorous going on lately.

We did finish up post harvest repairs for our beet digger. Got most of the tractors through the shop.

We have combines in shop now. Before you know it it will be time to start working on the planter.


I would love to have you contribute to this thread. I enjoy chatting with other farmers and learning about their operations.

It is my first passion. But when it turns winter and I am caught up with shop work I mess around with my second passion. I very much enjoy flint knapping and making selfbows.

Bjrogg

Here’s a short but stout one I recently finished I named “Tea Pot”
I’m a little Tea Pot
Short and Stout
Pull me to Full Draw
And I spit a arrow out
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise

Offline Pappy

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1539 on: Today at 10:12:05 am »
Nice bow, always enjoy your post and seeing what is going on up North. :)
 Pappy
Clarksville,Tennessee
TwinOaks Bowhunters
Life is Good

Offline Burnsie

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1540 on: Today at 02:31:23 pm »
Brian,
I grew up in the NW portion of Wisconsin where dairy farming was king. Families were raised and thrived off small 80-200 acre dairy farms with 50-100 milk cows.  My grandparents had a small 80 acre farm and produced grade B milk that was still picked up by the creamery in milk cans - (I'm aging myself).  I basically grew up on that farm, its where I learned work ethic and how to be thankful for the little things in life. Dairy farming is a hard life - those cows had to be milked twice a day "every" day - holidays, weekends it didn't matter "every" day (up at 4:00 am for morning milking, back in the house by 8:00-9:00 pm after evening milking). Did I mention it was every day.  In between you got to go work on your crops, or treat the herd for pink eye, or one of the other 50 things that can affect a cow.  Most farmers didn't trust anyone else to take care of their herd, so they never took a day off.  As a teenager during the summers I milked for several farmers so they could take off 1 week for a vacation - they trusted me.  Milking wore out a lot of good men constantly bending/stooping over to put on milkers. I went off to college and never became a dairy farmer.
Sadly, none of the small dairies that dotted the landscape exist anymore where I grew up.  2-3 mega dairies have scooped up all the the small farms, and opened up fence lines to create bigger fields.  The old barns and silos are dilapidated or gone.  The big players now have huge high tech milking parlors and run over 1000-1500 cows, basically around the clock.  They are impressive operations, but I sure miss the simpler times. 

Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1541 on: Today at 04:17:09 pm »
Burnsie we grew up very much the same.

I grew up on a dairy farm. My grandpa shipped his milk in the old milk cans. My dad switched over to a bulk tank with a cooler and agitator. We still carried all the milk to the tank by hand and dumped it in through a filter. I remember when we got a “modern “ pipeline. That really helped. The milk was carried to the tank by the pipeline and it saved a ton of work. In the summer you could look in any direction and see Holstein cows grazing in a pasture. 30 to 60 milk cows per herd.

We raised sugar beets and edible beans. Both of which had to be cultivated and hoed by hand. Believe me. I know where the saying “He got a hard row to hoe “ comes from. Of course we had hay to bale and straw to. We learned really young never to complain about being bored. Dad could always find something to do.

We were pretty good at finding things to do to. Didn’t take much to entertain us. We got rid of the milk cows in the 90’s and raised beef cattle until 2012. My son still has beef cattle and I help him out to.

Same here. A few Dutch farmers started up much bigger operations and now they are pretty much the only dairies around. I guess they can have it. I certainly don’t miss the cows. Did I mention it was twice every day. Plus all the other stuff. Cleaning pens, feeding calves, breaking in heifers that had never had a calf and been milked before. Dehorning and casturating calf. Not to mention the very important job of getting the cows bred back so they would have another calf and produce milk again. I honestly don’t know how those big operations do it.

I much prefer the crop side now. It’s still a lot of work, but I enjoy it. I find it challenging and rewarding. Not so much financially, but it’s good for my soul.

Bjrogg
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise

Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1542 on: Today at 04:26:53 pm »
Put in a little overtime over the weekend.

Bjrogg

Still a ways to go but it’s coming fast now. Limbs had to move a long way just to get to normal brace height. I think it’s 45 @ 19” here.
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise

Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1543 on: Today at 04:29:27 pm »
Looks a little stiff in the outer part of lower limb for sure. Gets harder to know what isnt a bow from here on
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise

Offline bjrogg

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Re: Life on the Farm
« Reply #1544 on: Today at 04:31:01 pm »
I see these things are popping up again.

Bjrogg
A hot cup of coffee and a beautiful sunrise