Memories sprout from growing up on a farm
Yes, some of the things we did may not have been the smartest or safest, but they made us who we are and probably really built up our immune systems!
Read MoreRiding a bicycle without a helmet, riding in a car without using seatbelts or infant car seats, drinking water from the garden hose and riding in the back of pickup truck.
You might have seen a list like this titled “How did we survive growing up in the ’70s?” I bet you could add to the list, and talking with some friends who also grew up on farms, we too have things to add.
Growing up on a farm you were around a lot of equipment. Being a passenger on a tractor without a cab. Learning to drive a tractor, and many other pieces of equipment, long before you were legally allowed to drive a car. Riding in and playing in freshly harvested grain in gravity wagons. Stacking hay and riding on loaded hay wagons. Farmers use a chain-driven conveyor to take bales up into the hayloft, the “attic” of the barn. Many a farm kid has walked on that conveyor, and some even rode bales, up into the hayloft.
I remember my mom sending us outside when my siblings and I had gotten on her last nerve. It didn’t matter if it was cold because the barn was available and the hayloft was our winter playroom. Epic rope swings! My older brother liked to build tunnels with bales of hay or stray — I never did like them. I didn’t like the ladders I had to use to get into and out of the hayloft, either.
The hayloft makes me think of the grain storage that my dad had up there. When the hayloft was full of hay and straw, you could just walk right over onto the oats or wheat. We played in it like sand and of course like any farm kid, we ate some.
I wonder if there is a farm kid who hasn’t sampled soybeans straight from the field, or even better, after they were roasted. Calf milk replacer powder and dried molasses are pretty tasty too. When you grow up on a dairy farm, you don’t get your milk from the grocery store, you go out to the milk house and get it out of the tank.
Yep, unpasteurized and unhomogenized. Another item of consumption that really got my friends to giggling was salt. We all admitted to licking the 10-inch-by-12-inch salt blocks that our fathers had put out for the cows. It didn’t matter to us that the cows had already licked them.
Have you ever been pulled behind the old farm truck or a tractor on a sled or tractor tire inner tube? Or like my husband and his brothers-go bumper skiing. Growing up in the snow belt, we had snowmobiles, so that was our mode of transportation. You learned to drive them first in the yard, then graduating to the fields close to the house and then venturing further.
There are more memories that I could have shared and more experiences that I have forgotten. Yes, some of the things we did may not have been the smartest or safest, but they made us who we are and probably really built up our immune systems. There is one thing that I remember and wonder what my parents were thinking. The electric company had been working on our road and gave us an empty giant spool that the line came on. We rolled that thing around and played on it for several years. How we didn’t break our necks or any bones is a mystery.
Something you learn real quick and always remember — it is best to assume that the electric fence is on!
Submitted by Mary Smallsreed, a member of the Trumbull County Farm Bureau who grew up on a family dairy farm in northeast Ohio.
OFBF Mission: Working together for Ohio farmers to advance agriculture and strengthen our communities.
Yes, some of the things we did may not have been the smartest or safest, but they made us who we are and probably really built up our immune systems!
Read MoreWhile eggs might be a simple protein that we take for granted at breakfast every morning, the reality is that getting a hen to stay healthy and lay eggs is rather complicated.
Read MoreAs we face the possibility of dangerously cold temperatures, taking care of pets and livestock simply comes down to good animal care.
Read MoreTrumbull County Farm Bureau is again offering scholarship opportunities to students who have been admitted to a two or four-year institution of higher learning.
Read MoreThat simple yes can lead to new places, new people, new accomplishments and ultimately a better us!
Read MorePerspective can shape your outlook and attitude.
Read MoreI believe that we all can learn to be resilient, whether you are a farmer or not. When we are faced with adversity, it is during those times we often grow the most.
Read MoreIt seems like just yesterday we were taking down the Christmas tree and putting away our holiday decor, and once…
Read MoreLessons from losing a beloved pet and embracing the emotions of the holiday season.
Read MoreBill Patterson of Chesterland has been re-elected president of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation.
Read More