Country Life

Show Only ...
Maps - Photos - Videos

The Good Life

Last night when I was at my parents house, one of their good ol’ boy neighbors with a beer belly was standing in the bed of a truck towing a goose neck cattle trailer, beer belly hanging out. Good ol country living for yeah. I was chergin about it although I joked that has to be dangerous as shit, being that the goose neck could easily crush you upon turning if your not careful.

While I don’t miss the winter commutes I do miss the small town life. While I think the neighbors to my parents are too close, I really don’t mind hearing the occasional bellow of their cattle or a whiff of their hog shit or something plastic they toss on their bonfire. I think it’s pretty damn sweet how they live even if supposedly their rural and poor.

I think it would be fun to live in a small town, be able to ride my four wheeler or side by side to the general store, have land and do a little hobby farming. Live off grid, use solar, burn my trash and recycle the cans and glass, compost, maybe garden a little bit and raise chickens and maybe a heritage hog or two. Smelly yes but that’s why you have land. Ride my four wheeler on my land, hunt and trap it. Have a small screened porch so I can watch nature on a morning like this or even watch the campfire while drinking beer and listening to music on a warm but buggy night.

I’m not there yet but eventually I’ll be able to enjoy the good life…

Milk and the dairy business

After my tiresome hike this weekend, I came back to my truck and opened the cooler got out a paper cup and poured myself a nice glass of milk. It was refreshing although maybe a little bit sticky on the lips. But I was super thirsty and that’s what I had.

I’ve always been a big milk drinker, typically buying two gallons of milk per week from Stewart’s. They have the best price and it’s right down the street from my apartment. I’ve always had an interest in the mostly docile large animals that make milk production a reality, how dairy farmers work their land to raise food for their cows and manage their production. They’re really is a lot that goes into a dairy.

Untitled [Expires September 16 2024]

YouTube has given me and the public at least a unique ability to see and learn much about the farm life from tractors to preparing the soil, planting and harvesting crops. It’s also shown the goings on in the tie stall barn from feeding to milking to raising and pulling calves. To artificial insemination and real bulls on ranches to preg testing cattle. Yeap, they have special plastic gloves for reaching up the anus and birth canal to check on the development of calves in the womb. I’ve learned more about the business decisions made every day and craft and science behind the milk business. Or even inside a milk processing plant that takes raw milk, processes it and pasteurizes it into many good products.

Being watched as the sun set

Really kind of fascinating stuff. Its interesting to know what’s going on in the field and in the barnyard as I travel the backcountry roads on my trips and travels. To make sense of smells of small town America to know what the various buildings on the farm represent. While I doubt I’ll ever get into the dairy business – my parents had dairy goats for a while, it’s interesting to learn more. While when I own my off grid cabin in the future I will likely do some homesteading, maybe so heritage hogs and chickens for meat, dairy is a tough thing to do with all the constant need to breed and bring the animals around for milking.

Can Farming Save Appalachia? – Modern Farmer

Can Farming Save Appalachia? – Modern Farmer

A reclaimed coal mine might not be the ideal place to grow vegetables, but the terrain didn’t stop Fritz Boettner from digging in. The director of Sprouting Farms has been working to revitalize the local food system in coal mining communities across West Virginia since 2014. The nonprofit established a farm incubator to train new farmers, developed partnerships with farms to expand wholesale markets in the area and created a local food hub with the goal of providing opportunities in the small, rural communities that once depended on coal mining to put food on their tables.

I would imagine in a lot of applachia that isn't farmed now, the soils and the climate are rather unfavorable.