Ross County Ohio field fire

Ross County farmer Brice Acton wasn’t home when he got the call about a field fire next door to his farm at the height of the drought in early September.

Brice ActonActon, who raises corn, soybeans and wheat with his father and family in Frankfort, Ohio, raced home to meet his dad and others who had come to take in the scope of the emergency and help as they could. When the tractor his dad was driving had a mechanical malfunction, Acton took other action.

“I climbed the neighbor’s (grain) leg and stood 100 feet in the air on the phone with my dad and was like, ‘Hey, here’s where the fire is. You need to go this direction or you need to go that direction,’” Acton said.

From his elevated view, Acton could direct the tractors below and tell them where they need to lay down corn as “firebreaks” so the responding fire departments could have a fighting chance to access the inferno, which they eventually were able to do.

The dry factors that led to his neighbor’s field fire were wreaking havoc all across Ohio this summer as the most intense drought since 1988 spread across the state, hitting Acton’s area hard. Dozens of counties in Ohio were given natural disaster designations, making the farms within them as well as contiguous counties eligible to apply for help through their local Farm Service Agency.

Extraordinary challenges

In any season farming is synonymous with risk, but this past year has been particularly challenging for Ohio farmers. Crop prices were already down when a historic drought made it certain that yields would be, too. Livestock farmers started dipping into their winter feed in August and those fires – from combines to fields to dairies – started sweeping the state. Add to that the inability at a federal level to agree on a new farm bill, and farmers have much on their minds and in their hearts, causing copious amounts of stress.

Acton has noticed the look on his peers’ faces, and he is concerned about their mental health.

“They just have a noticeable look, a different look about them. The cheerfulness is gone,” he said. “I’m not going to say they are depressed, but they have a depressed nature about them. It is a very real thing. I’ve personally struggled with it in the past. I want people to know I’m not ashamed to admit that I’ve struggled with it.”

Providing resources and breaking a stigma regarding farmer mental health has been a Farm Bureau priority issue for years. Acton not only talks about his struggles with friends and family, he often writes a “Thoughts From the Cab” post on his farm’s Facebook page sharing the moments when he’s “alone with his thoughts” out in the field.

“As farmers we’re so used to being the guys fixing things. We’re fixers. We’re for repairs. We don’t want to ever view ourselves as those being fixed or repaired,” Acton said. “And I think sometimes it’s just like a piece of equipment. You’re going to have to do some preventive maintenance…making sure (our mind is) sharpened and where it needs to be.”

Mental health resources are available to farmers at farmstateofmind.org and the 988 national suicide and crisis hotline. They also may be available from a friend or a neighbor who just needs to talk – or who you need to talk to.

“We can talk about the external injuries, but it’s those internal ones that you still want to boil on for some godforsaken reason,” Acton said. “The best thing I could have ever done was just opening up about it. Just to work through it and talk about it. That stigma, I guess, it needs to go away.”

Besides row crops, Acton and his wife, Pipe, also raise sheep and they established a flower farm, which they hand-planted this year.

That flower farm helps give Acton some perspective on life.

“I’m man enough to admit that I never thought I’d enjoy it the way I do,” he said. “There’s something nice (when) you go out and start the day at 6-6:30 walking the flower beds with your wife and look at all the beauty that exists. Even through the drought, you get to see all of that.”

Online extra

To hear more of Brice Acton’s story and how the drought impacted Ohio farmers, listen to the Ohio Farm Bureau Podcast Special: 2024 Ohio Drought. Acton’s story begins at the 21-minute mark.

Ohio Farm Bureau Podcast · Ohio Farm Bureau Podcast Special – 2024 Ohio Drought

 

The issue of property taxation remains as one of the biggest challenges our members face today. Ensuring agricultural property is valued for its agricultural potential and not development is critical to the continued success of Ohio agriculture.
Matt Aultman's avatar
Matt Aultman

Darke County Farm Bureau

Giving farmers a voice
The plan we are on is great. It’s comparable to my previous job's plan, and we are a sole proprietor.
Kevin Holy's avatar
Kevin Holy

Geauga County Farm Bureau

Ohio Farm Bureau Health Benefits Plan
I could not have done it without the resources I have found through Farm Bureau.
Gretchan Francis's avatar
Gretchan Francis

Trumbull County Farm Bureau

Bringing the farm back to life
We really appreciate what Farm Bureau has done to get people interested in this line of work and workforce development and getting people interested in this industry.
Jody Brown Boyd's avatar
Jody Brown Boyd

Brown's Family Farm Market

Finding farm labor
We work terrifically with the Ashtabula County Farm Bureau, hosting at least one to two outreach town hall events every year to educate new farmers and existing farmers on traditional CAUV and woodlands.
David Thomas's avatar
David Thomas

Ashtabula County Auditor

CAUV: Past, present and future
Because we are younger farmers just starting out, Farm Bureau has a lot of good opportunities and resources to help us grow in the future.
Hannah Kiser's avatar
Hannah Kiser

Sandusky County Farm Bureau

Farm Bureau involvement
Through the Select Partner program, we became educated in farm insurance and weren't just selling policies. It became more and more clear why farmers need an advocate like Ohio Farm Bureau.
Chad Ruhl's avatar
Chad Ruhl

Farm manager, CSI Insurance

Select Partner Program
So many of the issues that OFBF and its members are advocating for are important to all Ohioans. I look at OFBF as an agricultural watchdog advocating for farmers and rural communities across Ohio.
Mary Smallsreed's avatar
Mary Smallsreed

Trumbull County Farm Bureau

Advocacy
Suggested Tags: