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WHITE HORSE PLOWS
White Horse Machine, in Pike Gap, PA, is an excellent Amish implement company that has been around for a very long time. They advertise with us regularly. Year after year, their innovations have created quite a stir at the annual Horse Progress Days. White Horse is one of a dozen or so successful and responsible horsedrawn equipment companies in the U.S. They offer an ingenious forecart design OPEN-POLLINATED CORN AT SPRUCE RUN FARM The old way of selecting seed from open-pollinated corn involved selecting the best ears from the poorest ground. I have tried to select perfect ears based on the open-pollinated seed corn standards of the past. I learned these standards from old agricultural texts. The chosen ears of Reid’s average from 9 to 10.5 inches long and have smooth, well-formed grains in straight rows. I try to MAKING SORGHUM MOLASSES Making Sorghum Molasses. by Edwin McCoy. Reprinted from This Week, Lewisburg, WV. David Buhrman is keeping a tradition alive – not so much for tradition’s sake, but for his own practical purposes as he and his wife, Rose, go about building their farm some seven miles off Rt. 219 near Friars Hill. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES & CATTLE Plant Poisoning in Horses & Cattle. by Heather Smith Thomas of Salmon, Idaho. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES. CASE #1: Your child just brought his horse to the house through the front yard, even though you don’t want horses leaving manure piles on the lawn or trampling the flower beds. But little Billy is in a hurry because he forgot something and didn’t want to ride around through the barnyard JOHN DEERE MODEL A TRACTOR John Deere Model A Tractor. Many Journal readers rely solely on horse or mule power. Quite a few use only tractors and a whole ‘nother bunch prefer to combine power sources. A small group of farmer folk keep an old tractor around solely for belt power for such things as stationery threshing machines. A popular model for such jobs is theJohn
IN MEMORIAM: GENE LOGSDON In Memoriam: Gene Logsdon. Gene Logsdon, The Contrary Farmer, died of cancer May 31st, 2016, at his home in Ohio. I first read Gene’s work as a horse-crazy, cowgirl teenager nearly half a century ago, when he was writing for Farm Journal. As I grew older, I searched out his books and learned many things about farming and farmers, gardening SMALL FARMER'S JOURNALSMALL FARMER’S JOURNALSUBSCRIBE/RENEWSMALL FARMER’S MARKETARTICLESFEATURESCONTACT / ABOUT The farms are small and often situated on steep hills. Milk production is dominant in this area, with milking goats where the land is too steep for cows to graze. Until the end of the 50s the majority of the farms were powered with horses. Fifteen years later tractors had almost completely replaced the workhorse. SUBSCRIBE – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNALFARM DRUMSTARTING YOUR FARMPEOPLEBOOKSLETTERSTHE COST OF WORKING HORSES Small Farmer’s Journal, founded in 1976, is an award-winning, international agrarian quarterly with forty plus years of print history. The publication is dedicated to the preservation and support of small-scale agricultural pursuits and family farms. It currently goes out to 72 countries worldwide, as well as all of the U.S. states and Canadian provinces. OLD JOHN DEERE TWO CYLINDER TRACTOR MODELS The Model “B” is ideal general-purpose power for farms of medium size. Available with either all-fuel or more powerful gasoline engine. Standard equipment includes self-starter, front and rear lights, power shaft, belt pulley, and power lift. Powr-Trol, Roll-O-matic front wheels, and a wide variety of integral equipment also available. The Model “A” matches the power requirements on HERITAGE BREED MEAT CHICKENS The question of why one ought to consider raising heritage meat chickens can be approached, I think, from two different angles: farm-based reasons for the actual raising of heritage birds, and the marketing advantages that heritage birds offer for the small farmer. Heritage chickens are a distinctly niche product, and niche production is a boon to the small farm. To be sure, pastured poultryWHITE HORSE PLOWS
White Horse Machine, in Pike Gap, PA, is an excellent Amish implement company that has been around for a very long time. They advertise with us regularly. Year after year, their innovations have created quite a stir at the annual Horse Progress Days. White Horse is one of a dozen or so successful and responsible horsedrawn equipment companies in the U.S. They offer an ingenious forecart design OPEN-POLLINATED CORN AT SPRUCE RUN FARM The old way of selecting seed from open-pollinated corn involved selecting the best ears from the poorest ground. I have tried to select perfect ears based on the open-pollinated seed corn standards of the past. I learned these standards from old agricultural texts. The chosen ears of Reid’s average from 9 to 10.5 inches long and have smooth, well-formed grains in straight rows. I try to MAKING SORGHUM MOLASSES Making Sorghum Molasses. by Edwin McCoy. Reprinted from This Week, Lewisburg, WV. David Buhrman is keeping a tradition alive – not so much for tradition’s sake, but for his own practical purposes as he and his wife, Rose, go about building their farm some seven miles off Rt. 219 near Friars Hill. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES & CATTLE Plant Poisoning in Horses & Cattle. by Heather Smith Thomas of Salmon, Idaho. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES. CASE #1: Your child just brought his horse to the house through the front yard, even though you don’t want horses leaving manure piles on the lawn or trampling the flower beds. But little Billy is in a hurry because he forgot something and didn’t want to ride around through the barnyard JOHN DEERE MODEL A TRACTOR John Deere Model A Tractor. Many Journal readers rely solely on horse or mule power. Quite a few use only tractors and a whole ‘nother bunch prefer to combine power sources. A small group of farmer folk keep an old tractor around solely for belt power for such things as stationery threshing machines. A popular model for such jobs is theJohn
IN MEMORIAM: GENE LOGSDON In Memoriam: Gene Logsdon. Gene Logsdon, The Contrary Farmer, died of cancer May 31st, 2016, at his home in Ohio. I first read Gene’s work as a horse-crazy, cowgirl teenager nearly half a century ago, when he was writing for Farm Journal. As I grew older, I searched out his books and learned many things about farming and farmers, gardening SLEDS – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNAL The remainder of this section on Agricultural Implements is about homemade equipment for use with draft animals. These implements are all proven and serviceable. They are easily worked by a single animal weighing 1,000 pounds, and probably a good deal less. Sleds rate high on our homestead. They can be pulled over rough terrain. They do well traversing slopes. Being low to the ground, they areCONTACT / ABOUT
About Us. The Small Farmer’s Journal Inc. is an Oregon based family-held corporation doing business in publishing and agriculture.. The Small Farmer’s Journal is a highly acclaimed, award winning international agrarian quarterly. It was established in 1976 by Lynn Miller. It currently goes out to 72 countries worldwide, as well as all of the U.S. states and Canadian provinces. CHILDREN ON THE FARM / A RIVER TO CROSS Whether picking flowers from a tulip tree in Kentucky or swimming in a muddy Texas pond, children can always find something to do in the country. It is January. This time of year with fair weather and sunny days in Texas (no snow in the south!), my brother disked the garden area for planting. Yesterday the younger children set out half a crate of onions, which grow well here. Joshua andTUKI’S HUBCAP
Tuki’s Hubcap. by Lynn R. Miller of Singing Horse Ranch. A few years back we traded John and Twinka Lupher a lovely bay filly, out of our Belgian stallion, for rebuilding our old corral. BUILDING A SHOEING STOCK Building a Shoeing Stock. by Doug Beck of Daybreak Farm, Bluffdale, UT. Many small farmers and horsefarmers can attest that one of the attributes contributing to success and satisfaction of the farming endeavor is being able to do more for yourself and reducing the amount of off-farm, hired, or purchased services and equipment required torun the farm.
TAMMIE UNGER
Whether picking flowers from a tulip tree in Kentucky or swimming in a muddy Texas pond, children can always find something to do in thecountry.
BOBSLED BUILDING PLANS Bobsled Building Plans. by Lynn R. Miller. This material appears as a side-bar in Lynn Miller’s Art of Working Horses.It appears here by permission of the author. Here are two old-style, heavy-duty, bobsled building plans of the sort you might find in New England and the Maritime Provinces of Canada. ICELANDIC – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNAL Because their farm was selling, the horses needed to be moved out, but we weren’t quite ready yet. Our friends who had told us about them generously offered to keep the horses at their farm, with their Icelandics, for a few weeks while we finished fencing and stalls. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES & CATTLE Plant Poisoning in Horses & Cattle. by Heather Smith Thomas of Salmon, Idaho. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES. CASE #1: Your child just brought his horse to the house through the front yard, even though you don’t want horses leaving manure piles on the lawn or trampling the flower beds. But little Billy is in a hurry because he forgot something and didn’t want to ride around through the barnyard BAMBOO: A MULTIPURPOSE AGROFORESTRY CROP Bamboo Agroforestry. Agroforestry is the integration of woody plants with other ag enterprises such as crop or livestock production. The idea behind agroforestry is to derive both economic and ecological benefits, two key goals of sustainable agriculture. Bamboo as a SMALL FARMER'S JOURNALSMALL FARMER’S JOURNALSUBSCRIBE/RENEWSMALL FARMER’S MARKETARTICLESFEATURESCONTACT / ABOUT The farms are small and often situated on steep hills. Milk production is dominant in this area, with milking goats where the land is too steep for cows to graze. Until the end of the 50s the majority of the farms were powered with horses. Fifteen years later tractors had almost completely replaced the workhorse. SUBSCRIBE – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNALFARM DRUMSTARTING YOUR FARMPEOPLEBOOKSLETTERSTHE COST OF WORKING HORSES Small Farmer’s Journal, founded in 1976, is an award-winning, international agrarian quarterly with forty plus years of print history. The publication is dedicated to the preservation and support of small-scale agricultural pursuits and family farms. It currently goes out to 72 countries worldwide, as well as all of the U.S. states and Canadian provinces. OLD JOHN DEERE TWO CYLINDER TRACTOR MODELS The Model “B” is ideal general-purpose power for farms of medium size. Available with either all-fuel or more powerful gasoline engine. Standard equipment includes self-starter, front and rear lights, power shaft, belt pulley, and power lift. Powr-Trol, Roll-O-matic front wheels, and a wide variety of integral equipment also available. The Model “A” matches the power requirements on HERITAGE BREED MEAT CHICKENS The question of why one ought to consider raising heritage meat chickens can be approached, I think, from two different angles: farm-based reasons for the actual raising of heritage birds, and the marketing advantages that heritage birds offer for the small farmer. Heritage chickens are a distinctly niche product, and niche production is a boon to the small farm. To be sure, pastured poultryWHITE HORSE PLOWS
White Horse Machine, in Pike Gap, PA, is an excellent Amish implement company that has been around for a very long time. They advertise with us regularly. Year after year, their innovations have created quite a stir at the annual Horse Progress Days. White Horse is one of a dozen or so successful and responsible horsedrawn equipment companies in the U.S. They offer an ingenious forecart design OPEN-POLLINATED CORN AT SPRUCE RUN FARM The old way of selecting seed from open-pollinated corn involved selecting the best ears from the poorest ground. I have tried to select perfect ears based on the open-pollinated seed corn standards of the past. I learned these standards from old agricultural texts. The chosen ears of Reid’s average from 9 to 10.5 inches long and have smooth, well-formed grains in straight rows. I try to MAKING SORGHUM MOLASSES Making Sorghum Molasses. by Edwin McCoy. Reprinted from This Week, Lewisburg, WV. David Buhrman is keeping a tradition alive – not so much for tradition’s sake, but for his own practical purposes as he and his wife, Rose, go about building their farm some seven miles off Rt. 219 near Friars Hill. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES & CATTLE Plant Poisoning in Horses & Cattle. by Heather Smith Thomas of Salmon, Idaho. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES. CASE #1: Your child just brought his horse to the house through the front yard, even though you don’t want horses leaving manure piles on the lawn or trampling the flower beds. But little Billy is in a hurry because he forgot something and didn’t want to ride around through the barnyard JOHN DEERE MODEL A TRACTOR John Deere Model A Tractor. Many Journal readers rely solely on horse or mule power. Quite a few use only tractors and a whole ‘nother bunch prefer to combine power sources. A small group of farmer folk keep an old tractor around solely for belt power for such things as stationery threshing machines. A popular model for such jobs is theJohn
IN MEMORIAM: GENE LOGSDON In Memoriam: Gene Logsdon. Gene Logsdon, The Contrary Farmer, died of cancer May 31st, 2016, at his home in Ohio. I first read Gene’s work as a horse-crazy, cowgirl teenager nearly half a century ago, when he was writing for Farm Journal. As I grew older, I searched out his books and learned many things about farming and farmers, gardening SMALL FARMER'S JOURNALSMALL FARMER’S JOURNALSUBSCRIBE/RENEWSMALL FARMER’S MARKETARTICLESFEATURESCONTACT / ABOUT The farms are small and often situated on steep hills. Milk production is dominant in this area, with milking goats where the land is too steep for cows to graze. Until the end of the 50s the majority of the farms were powered with horses. Fifteen years later tractors had almost completely replaced the workhorse. SUBSCRIBE – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNALFARM DRUMSTARTING YOUR FARMPEOPLEBOOKSLETTERSTHE COST OF WORKING HORSES Small Farmer’s Journal, founded in 1976, is an award-winning, international agrarian quarterly with forty plus years of print history. The publication is dedicated to the preservation and support of small-scale agricultural pursuits and family farms. It currently goes out to 72 countries worldwide, as well as all of the U.S. states and Canadian provinces. OLD JOHN DEERE TWO CYLINDER TRACTOR MODELS The Model “B” is ideal general-purpose power for farms of medium size. Available with either all-fuel or more powerful gasoline engine. Standard equipment includes self-starter, front and rear lights, power shaft, belt pulley, and power lift. Powr-Trol, Roll-O-matic front wheels, and a wide variety of integral equipment also available. The Model “A” matches the power requirements on HERITAGE BREED MEAT CHICKENS The question of why one ought to consider raising heritage meat chickens can be approached, I think, from two different angles: farm-based reasons for the actual raising of heritage birds, and the marketing advantages that heritage birds offer for the small farmer. Heritage chickens are a distinctly niche product, and niche production is a boon to the small farm. To be sure, pastured poultryWHITE HORSE PLOWS
White Horse Machine, in Pike Gap, PA, is an excellent Amish implement company that has been around for a very long time. They advertise with us regularly. Year after year, their innovations have created quite a stir at the annual Horse Progress Days. White Horse is one of a dozen or so successful and responsible horsedrawn equipment companies in the U.S. They offer an ingenious forecart design OPEN-POLLINATED CORN AT SPRUCE RUN FARM The old way of selecting seed from open-pollinated corn involved selecting the best ears from the poorest ground. I have tried to select perfect ears based on the open-pollinated seed corn standards of the past. I learned these standards from old agricultural texts. The chosen ears of Reid’s average from 9 to 10.5 inches long and have smooth, well-formed grains in straight rows. I try to MAKING SORGHUM MOLASSES Making Sorghum Molasses. by Edwin McCoy. Reprinted from This Week, Lewisburg, WV. David Buhrman is keeping a tradition alive – not so much for tradition’s sake, but for his own practical purposes as he and his wife, Rose, go about building their farm some seven miles off Rt. 219 near Friars Hill. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES & CATTLE Plant Poisoning in Horses & Cattle. by Heather Smith Thomas of Salmon, Idaho. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES. CASE #1: Your child just brought his horse to the house through the front yard, even though you don’t want horses leaving manure piles on the lawn or trampling the flower beds. But little Billy is in a hurry because he forgot something and didn’t want to ride around through the barnyard JOHN DEERE MODEL A TRACTOR John Deere Model A Tractor. Many Journal readers rely solely on horse or mule power. Quite a few use only tractors and a whole ‘nother bunch prefer to combine power sources. A small group of farmer folk keep an old tractor around solely for belt power for such things as stationery threshing machines. A popular model for such jobs is theJohn
IN MEMORIAM: GENE LOGSDON In Memoriam: Gene Logsdon. Gene Logsdon, The Contrary Farmer, died of cancer May 31st, 2016, at his home in Ohio. I first read Gene’s work as a horse-crazy, cowgirl teenager nearly half a century ago, when he was writing for Farm Journal. As I grew older, I searched out his books and learned many things about farming and farmers, gardening SLEDS – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNAL The remainder of this section on Agricultural Implements is about homemade equipment for use with draft animals. These implements are all proven and serviceable. They are easily worked by a single animal weighing 1,000 pounds, and probably a good deal less. Sleds rate high on our homestead. They can be pulled over rough terrain. They do well traversing slopes. Being low to the ground, they areCONTACT / ABOUT
About Us. The Small Farmer’s Journal Inc. is an Oregon based family-held corporation doing business in publishing and agriculture.. The Small Farmer’s Journal is a highly acclaimed, award winning international agrarian quarterly. It was established in 1976 by Lynn Miller. It currently goes out to 72 countries worldwide, as well as all of the U.S. states and Canadian provinces. CHILDREN ON THE FARM / A RIVER TO CROSS Whether picking flowers from a tulip tree in Kentucky or swimming in a muddy Texas pond, children can always find something to do in the country. It is January. This time of year with fair weather and sunny days in Texas (no snow in the south!), my brother disked the garden area for planting. Yesterday the younger children set out half a crate of onions, which grow well here. Joshua andTUKI’S HUBCAP
Tuki’s Hubcap. by Lynn R. Miller of Singing Horse Ranch. A few years back we traded John and Twinka Lupher a lovely bay filly, out of our Belgian stallion, for rebuilding our old corral. BUILDING A SHOEING STOCK Building a Shoeing Stock. by Doug Beck of Daybreak Farm, Bluffdale, UT. Many small farmers and horsefarmers can attest that one of the attributes contributing to success and satisfaction of the farming endeavor is being able to do more for yourself and reducing the amount of off-farm, hired, or purchased services and equipment required torun the farm.
TAMMIE UNGER
Whether picking flowers from a tulip tree in Kentucky or swimming in a muddy Texas pond, children can always find something to do in thecountry.
BOBSLED BUILDING PLANS Bobsled Building Plans. by Lynn R. Miller. This material appears as a side-bar in Lynn Miller’s Art of Working Horses.It appears here by permission of the author. Here are two old-style, heavy-duty, bobsled building plans of the sort you might find in New England and the Maritime Provinces of Canada. ICELANDIC – SMALL FARMER'S JOURNAL Because their farm was selling, the horses needed to be moved out, but we weren’t quite ready yet. Our friends who had told us about them generously offered to keep the horses at their farm, with their Icelandics, for a few weeks while we finished fencing and stalls. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES & CATTLE Plant Poisoning in Horses & Cattle. by Heather Smith Thomas of Salmon, Idaho. PLANT POISONING IN HORSES. CASE #1: Your child just brought his horse to the house through the front yard, even though you don’t want horses leaving manure piles on the lawn or trampling the flower beds. But little Billy is in a hurry because he forgot something and didn’t want to ride around through the barnyard BAMBOO: A MULTIPURPOSE AGROFORESTRY CROP Bamboo Agroforestry. Agroforestry is the integration of woody plants with other ag enterprises such as crop or livestock production. The idea behind agroforestry is to derive both economic and ecological benefits, two key goals of sustainable agriculture. Bamboo as a * Small Farmer’s Journal* Subscribe/Renew
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SMALL FARMER'S JOURNAL A Quarterly Periodical, Defending Small Farms and Craftsmanship Since1976.
MONDAY
November 30, 2020
by Andrew S. Fuller
from 44-2
FRUIT BASKETS & BOXES To grow a crop of fruit is but the initial step towards the successful termination of the enterprise. If the fruit is to be sent to market, then crates, baskets, etc., are necessary for gathering and transporting, all of which should be provided in advance of the ripening of the crop. The number of baskets required per acre cannot be given, inasmuch as the product will not be the same in any two seasons, but it is always best to provide enough, for if the supply should fall short in the busy part of the season, it might causeconsiderable loss.
read more...
TUESDAY
December 1, 2020
by Lloyd Marsden
from 44-2
MARSDEN RANCH HAYRACK The Marsden Hayrack was likely built in the early 20th century and was used in various forms until the mid-60’s. Sometimes called a “basket rack,” it wasn’t glamorous, so few pictures exist. One from 1953 shows it in the farm yard and it still had its original wood wheels and running gear. By the 1990’s little remained. I was able to bring to my shop the front axle, hounds, sand beam, tongue and one wheel. Fortunately, I was able to get all 4 sets of skeins and boxingsfor the wheels.
read more...
WEDNESDAY
December 2, 2020
by S.W. Fletcher
from 44-2
POLLINATION IN ORCHARDS All observing fruit-growers have seen trees which blossom full but do not set a fair amount of fruit; many have found their orchards unprofitable for this reason. It is a practical point to know the causes of this loss and the best way to prevent it.read more...
THURSDAY
December 3, 2020
by Jim Britton
from 44-2
THE BALLAD OF OLD BILL Bill’s early life reads like a chapter from Studs Terkel. Born in Sacramento, by the time he was a young teenager he was on the road following the migrant farm labor camps. Picking fruit, digging irrigation canals, any work he could find to stay alive in the Depression Era West.read more...
FRIDAY
December 4, 2020
by Liberty Hyde Baileyfrom 28-2
MUSHROOM
Decaying vegetable matter, a uniform and rather low temperature, a uniform supply of moisture, – these are the general requisites for Mushroom-growing. The decaying matter is supplied by horse manure. The manure is allowed to heat and is turned several times before it is placed in the bed. The heating itself is probably of no advantage except as it contributes to the decay of the material: heat can be supplied by other means if necessary. The broken and decaying manure is placed a few inches or a foot deep in beds. When the temperature is reduced to 90 degrees or less the spawn is planted. As soon as the bed has cooled sufficiently, it is covered with earth or litter to regulate the temperature and moisture.read more...
-------------------------WEATHER
EXPLORE SMALL FARMER'S JOURNAL: PEOPLE OUR FRIEND AND CHAMPION PAUL BIRDSALL HAS PASSED ONfrom issue: 41-4
People
Our dear, gentle friend farmer Paul Birdsall had the countenance of an old Maine lobsterman-wood cutter mixed with a toy maker’s spirit. He had that long true visage of a man at sea, it started ‘neath the cap bill and waved out and away just as far as need be. He had the posture of a man poised to turn and move onto the next thing that needed doing. No hesitations, no wasted steps. He had the patient reach and touch of a true horseman, making useful contact and taking sweetrewards.
JOHN ERSKINE
People
Video
John Erskine farms with horses in Sequim, WA.CIRCLING THE GARDEN
by: McCabe Coolidge
from issue: 27-3
People
Our white garage faced south and here were stakes of tomatoes. The stalks were tied with twine. We stopped. My dad reached in to the front pocket of his khaki pants and pulled out a saltshaker he had grabbed on our way out of the kitchen. He picked a tomato, salted and bit into it, testing its taste and juiciness before passing it to me for a pre-breakfast treat. Each of us leaned forward, the juice spilling harmlessly on the grass. THE PAINTINGS OF LIBERTY PROFFIT DAYby: Shannon Berteau
from issue: 42-2
People
Art • Liberty Proffit Day Her paintings aren’t the more traditional, romantic, panoramic vistas of life in the west but rather true portraits of people she knows, taken from moments in everyday life. Her main goal with her art is the preservation of the ranching lifestyle and culture and she contributes to that not just with her painting but her daily life as well. She can be found just as often riding out to help neighbors with branding and other tasks on their ranch as in front of a painting.THE WOODS BETRAYED
by: Donna Getz
from issue: 25-2
Farming Systems & Approaches• People
Horse Logging •
Logging
What of the squirrels, grouse, frogs, mice and fur bearing animals that call this home? They were betrayed by the ones who studied them, lived off them to either be trampled by the machines or try to find a new home as winter set in. Their food supply and homes are gone forever so may many of them be gone forever. What greed does to us! PLOWING IN THE RAIN: TOO WET TO DO ANYTHING ELSEby: Lynn R. Miller
from issue: 22-3
People
Plowing Contest
• Plows • Sulky plow• Walking plow
They advertise “rain or shine” for the Rock Creek Plowing Exhibition and this year they were put to the test. I’m happy to tell you that the horses and teamsters and spectators passed the test with flying, if soaked, colors. But I had forgotten that folks west of the Cascade Mountain range are accustomed to this sort of weather. I think it was my friend Ron VanGrunsven who, when I asked him why he was there, remarked “It’s too wet to do anything else.” LOOSE HAY WITH RYAN FOXLEYby: Andrew Plotsky
Farming Systems & Approaches• People
Hay • Video
Loose Hay with Ryan Foxley A Farmrun Production by Andrew Plotsky THE BALLAD OF OLD BILLby: Jim Britton
from issue: 44-2
People • Thursday Bill’s early life reads like a chapter from Studs Terkel. Born in Sacramento, by the time he was a young teenager he was on the road following the migrant farm labor camps. Picking fruit, digging irrigation canals, any work he could find to stay alive in the Depression Era West. FARMING BY MOON SIGNCrops & Soil
• Farming Systems & Approaches• Gardening
• How-To & Plans
• People
Moon phases •
Moon signs
Planetary influence in planting seeds TWAIN UNDER THE FARM SPELLby: Paul Hunter
from issue: 41-1
People
Mark Twain •
Samuel Clemens
In his greatest works — Tom Sawyer, Life on the Mississippi and Huckleberry Finn — Twain offered a contrast and tension between town and countryside, between the web of deals and cons and bustle of activity that the modern world would call decidedly urban, and the hard-scrabble but quiet and ultimately nourishing living on farms. There were four farms that touched Sam Clemens, rural locales that sustained and helped mold him, that reached from his beginnings through the decades of his greatest creative efforts. NEW YORK HORSEFARMER: ED BUTTON AND HIS BELGIANS by: Kathleen E. Suits Smithfrom issue: 05-2
Livestock •
People
Belgians • Ed Button• First20
In New York State one does not explore the world of draft horses long before the name of Ed Button is invariably and most respectfully mentioned. Ed’s name can be heard in the conversations of nearly everyone concerned with heavy horses from the most experienced teamsters to the most novice horse hobbyists. His career with Belgians includes a vast catalog of activities: showing, pulling, training, farming, breeding, and driving, which Ed says, “I’ve been doing since I was old enough to hold the lines.”DOCTOR DON MUSTARD
by: Patrice Ericksonfrom issue: 26-1
People
Veterinarian
In that valley with the ocean beaches to the west and the crest of the Olympic Mountains to the North is nestled Crestview Farm, home of the legendary Doctor Donald Mustard, D.V.M. Doc is well known in the area as the big horse veterinarian, and his reputation is excellent and well deserved. An “old-fashioned” vet, he answers his own phone and is generous and sensible with his advice. He has saved countless pets and livestock from prolonged illness, and saved their owners countless dollars with good over-the-phone advice and do-it-yourselfanimal care wisdom.
ICELANDIC SHEEP
by: Laurie Ball-Gischfrom issue: 29-3
Livestock •
People
Icelandic Sheep
I came to sheep farming from a background in the arts – with a passion for spinning and weaving. When we were able to leave our house in town to buy our small farm, a former dairy operation, I had no idea that the desire to have a couple of fiber animals would turn into full time shepherding. I had discovered Icelandic sheep, and was completely enamored of their beauty, their hardiness and their intelligence. BETTER A ROSE FOR THE LIVING by: Brandt Ainsworthfrom issue: 40-1
People
In the corner of my living room is what some would call folk art. Of course, one man’s art is another’s trash. I’m not big on metaphors, so it’s neither trash nor treasure to me. It simply reminds me of all the years I made my living logging with horses. Evidently some long ago horse logger was having a bad day and broke a drive grab. Breakdowns happen. You fix them; you keep on keepin’ on. A TIME TO LAUGH, A TIME TO CRYby: Alma Barkman
from issue: 42-4
People
It should be noted that, much to Bunyan’s amusement, Poka had a vocabulary that would make a sailor cringe, a highly peculiar asset in a day and age when women rarely swore. To Bunyan’s way of thinking, to hear her let loose was well worth the sacrifice of a few stalks of rhubarb, so every spring Queenie and King “accidentally” trampled Poka’s rhubarb patch. Beholding the ruins from her kitchen window, Poka would come tearing out of her house, her apron flapping in the wind. Wrinkled jowls jiggling with intensity, black eyes flashing with vehemence, she would lob a volley of cuss words toward Bunyan and hiswhite horses.
NYFC BOOTSTRAP VIDEOS: CLOVER MEAD FARMby: Andrew Plotsky
People
Dairy • National YoungFarmers Coalition
• Video
I couldn’t have been happier to collaborate with The National Young Farmers Coaltion again when they called up about being involved in their Bootstrap Blog Series. In 2013, all of their bloggers were young and beginning lady dairy farmers, and they invited us on board to consult and collaborate in the production of videos of each farmer contributor to the blog series. GROWING FARMERS AND THE FOOD MOVEMENT FOR 50 YEARS by: Jennifer McNultyfrom issue: 41-2
People
Education • UC
Santa Cruz
It all began 50 years ago when faculty and students appealed to UC Santa Cruz Chancellor Dean McHenry, proposing a garden project that would serve as a central gathering spot on the remote, forested campus. As legend has it, Alan Chadwick, a charismatic, somewhat cantankerous master gardener from England, chose a steep, rocky, sun-scorched slope covered with poison oak to prove a point: If students could create a garden there, they could create one anywhere. And create they did.PLOTTING AGAINST ME
by: McCabe Coolidge
from issue: 26-4
People
Today was the day to dig another garden and plant broccoli. Spring had sprung early, March in the Piedmont woos, peas were already in, fear of frost disappeared with the blush of haze at dawn. I was ready. I had driven to Pittsboro the day before, and purchased old railroad ties for garden boundaries, unused for almost 50 years, ever since the spit of track from Sanford to Pittsboro had been closed by theSouthern Railroad.
LITTLEFIELD NOTES: TALES FROM THE BOZEMAN TRAIL PART 1by: Ryan Foxley
from issue: 43-3
LittleField Notes
•
People
During the summer of 1991 I went to work for a Montana outfit called the Bozeman Trail Wagon Train. For a youth coming of age in the late 20th century it was high adventure. At such an impressionable age I learned a great deal about the nature of horses, of men, and of myself. It is said that truth is stranger than fiction, and those summers of my youth, especially the one spent on the Bozeman Trail, while not necessarily stranger than fiction, were certainly on par with any fiction I have read. POETRY CORNER: WHAT A BOY LIES AWAKE WONDERINGPeople
This is a poem from Paul Hunter’s book Ripening.JACKO
by: H. Benson
from issue: 11-1
People
Donkeys • Jacks
• Jennets
• Mules
By the time he was 3 years old, Jacko had grown into a big size jack, 13 hands tall and 900 pounds, and was still growing. That summer he ran the singlerow corn planter and raked the hay, proved himself handier with a single row cultivator than a single ox, getting closer to the plants without stepping on them. Gradually he had paced himself to his three educated gaits to fill whatever job Lafe required of him: fast walk for the planter and rake, slow walk for the cultivator and plant-setter, and brisk trot for the buggy.GOOD HORSES
by: William Castle
from issue: 41-4
People
Having written this down I must admit to a slight embarrassment. It is not because I worry about admitting to a lack of skill, or fear being seen as a romantic. It is because some of you will have similar stories, perhaps more impressive stories, as this is just the sort of thing that happens when you spend enough time with horses at work. It is at once normal, but also extraordinary.GEOFF MORTON
by: William Castle
from issue: 29-1
People
Anyone who has had a conversation with Geoff about working horses, especially if they work horses themselves, will realise that Geoff, through his work and interest in everything to do with the working horse, has already done a great deal to preserve and pass on this knowledge. After talking with Geoff, I am probably not the only one who is left with the impression that, despite having my head full of interesting and useful information, there is still a lot more tolearn.
A VISIT WITH OLAF NYBY IN NORWAYby: Barbara Corson
from issue: 29-1
People
Olaf Nyby
Norway is a beautiful, rugged country, which has produced several breeds of hardy, versatile horses. Until the Second World War, horses were a primary source of power on the characteristically small, remote farms, and in the immense forests. The steep land and long cold winters created strong selective pressure and contributed to the development of tough, intelligent horses that generally thrive withminimal care.
TODAY I PREPARE
People
Today I Prepare by Lynn Miller Summering towards seated moments found without splinter found with or without care. No audience save the critical unbecoming self. Were it a long race to now, surprised to be amongst the last running with a chance to go to the target beyond end, tanks full with cupped felt. So OF LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN FARMER by: Hector St. John De Crevecoeurfrom issue: 34-4
People
Beekeeping • Bees It is my bees, however, which afford me the most pleasing and extensive themes; let me look at them when I will, their government, their industry, their quarrels, their passions, always present me with something new; for which reason, when weary with labour, my common place of rest is under my locust-trees, close by my bee-house. THE EFFECT OF AFFECTIONby: Inga Witscher
from issue: 43-2
People
Each episode of Around the Farm Table ends with a meal, made from the products from the farms featured in that show. With the volunteer firefighters, many of whom are also dairy farmers, we had a meal of Wagyu burgers, green bean salad and homemade pickles spiced with horseradish, as we discussed, in detail, the vagaries of putting up hay, and how fires can get ignited in barns. Little did I know that they would soon be coming to my aid. OREGON’S NEW/OLD PLOWING MATCHby: Lynn R. Miller
from issue: 31-3
Livestock •
People •
Wednesday
Plowing Contest
• Plows
After a hiatus of more than a decade, the Oregon Draft Horse community has a full-fledged Draft Horse and Mule Plowing Competition once again. Organization president Duane Van Dyke was quite excited about the conversion back to competition from the long standing ‘demonstration’ play days that have been held over recent years. This year’s May event featured a whole lot of animals and a great crowd of participants and spectators all enjoying the emerald green beauty of Champoeg State Park. MAGGIE – A VERY SPECIAL COW by: Heather Smith Thomasfrom issue: 43-3
Livestock •
People
Cows
When Dani was 5 years old she enjoyed “helping” grandma with the ranch chores every chance she got. Even though her mama and siblings still lived in town at that time, she wanted to come to the ranch and see the animals. She loved the cattle, but was a little afraid of the big ones. One spring day when she was tagging along with me to feed the horses and water the cows in the field above our house, she told me she wanted to pet a cow or calf. IN MEMORIAM: GENE LOGSDONby: Beth Greenwood
from issue: 40-3
People
Gene Logsdon •
The Contrary Farmer
Gene didn’t see life (or much of anything else) through conventional eyes. I remember his comment about a course he took in psychology when he was trying to argue that animals did in fact have personalities (as any farmer or rancher will tell you is absolutely true), and the teacher basically told him to sit down and shut up because he didn’t know what he was taking about. Gene said: “I was so angry I left the course and then left the whole stupid school.” A FABULOUS 4-H FAMILYby: Nan Clark
from issue: 30-3
People
4-H • Goats
I write the first draft of this story with a special pencil — white with green lettering and a green 4-leaf clover. Each leaf is imprinted with a white H. Below the clover is this motto: “To Make The Best Better.” Further lettering states: “I pledge my Head to clearer thinking – my Heart to greater loyalty – my Hands to larger service, and my Health to better living, for my club, my community, my country, and my world.” NORTH IDAHO’S RENAISSANCE WOMAN LIZ GOLLENby: Kathleen Mulroy
from issue: 38-1
People
Liz Gollen is what could be termed a rural Renaissance woman: She’s a beekeeper; a flower-farmer; a writer, artist and occasional film-maker; a chicken-raiser (for eggs); and, last but certainly not least, a full-time elementary school teacher. She and Archie, her husband of many years, inhabit a beautiful and sturdy hand-built log home on a wooded plot of family land in Sagle, Idaho. 19TH CENTURY WISCONSIN WATERCOLORISTby: Joe Kapler ,
Lynn R. Miller
from issue: 42-3
Book Reviews
• People
Art • Paul Seifert Wisconsin in Watercolor: The Life and Legend of Folk Artist Paul Seifert, by Joe Kapler, is a superb 2018 art book from the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. The extensive spread of the fascinating and beautiful Seifert paintings would be reason enough for a lover of art to search out this volume. Add in the wonderfully researched and written story of this illusive gentleman and his life’s work and you’ve a double treasure.PFERDESTARK 2007
by: Dr. Jutta Jung
from issue: 31-3
People • Tuesday
Pferdestarke
PFERDESTARK is the European version of the U.S. Horse Progress Days. Nowhere else in Europe can be found more modern horse drawn machinery and equipment than at Detmold, the shop window of draught horses at work on the field and in the forest. Working demonstrations and international competitions in ploughing, logging and driving are part of this two day event, as well as an international draught horse show.OUR LANDS
Farming Systems & Approaches• People
Video
Our lands and soil are possibly the most underappreciated resources we have, yet their conservation is vital to humanity. We need to have an important discussion on what can be done to protect the planet through proper land management. HORSE PROGRESS DAYS 2007by: Lynn R. Miller
from issue: 31-3
People • ThursdayHorse Progress Days
All the good implements were on hand with a few new surprises. There was a bale accumulator, all gravity – which gathered 10 bales to one spot. And I & J showed a cover crop roller especially designed to flatten and crush thick cereal rye before no-till corn planting. This tool had resulted from research done at the Rodale Institute. Pioneer, White Horse Machine, Shipse Farm Supply, Gateway, Hogback produce and all the other manufacturers put on an excellent field display. A BAD DAY IN HARMONYby: Garry Leeson
from issue: 41-2
People
Gary, hoping that that was the lot, revved up the big yellow machine in eager anticipation but once again I called a halt and disappeared in the direction of the house. When I reappeared at the graveside holding a dead cat by the tail Gary shut the machine down completely, remained totally silent for what seemed like a long time, and then leaned out of the cab and with a look of mock concern on his face said in his dry manner, “Where did you say the wife and kids are?” CULTIVATING QUESTIONS: PORTRAIT OF A PLAIN FARMERby: Anne Nordell
, Eric Nordell
from issue: 31-3
Cultivating Questions•
People
The first balers were so large and clumsy, no one ever thought you could pull them with horses. So the church never put a ban on balers. Then the small pick-up balers came in and the farmers pulled them with their horses. The Amish have adopted just about everything that will pull with horses. It’s hard to say why one settlement made certain restrictions and others didn’t, why some have worked and others haven’t. I guess you’d just have to say it’s the will of thepeople.
PEACEFIELD: A MODEST PROPOSALby: Paul Hunter
from issue: 34-4
People
So it might be well to recall national models such as John and Abigail Adams, who when it mattered, knew what to do and did it without fanfare, whether the moment called for defending British soldiers against charges of murder in the Boston Massacre, drafting a state constitution, melting down pewter spoons to cast musket balls—or getting in a hay crop before the rains came. Their values extended beyond expediency and profit to the greater social good. BUCK & MARY RICKETT: SUCCESSFUL SMALL FARMERSby: Lynn R. Miller
from issue: 06-2
People
First20 • Poultry Ten years ago I answered a classified ad and went to a small western Oregon farm to look at some young laying hens that were for sale. That visit to Buck and Mary Rickett’s place made a quiet impression on me that has lasted to this day. On that first visit in ’71 my eager new farmer’s eye and ear absorbed as much as possible of what seemed like an unusual successful, small operation. I asked what must have seemed like an endless stream of questions on that early visit.IN THE BEGINNING
by: Caroline McCullochfrom issue: 42-2
People
Here on these twenty five acres a steady transformation is happening, a confluence of fortuitous events, opportunities, and passion that brings me to the righteous work of land stewardship. Dad’s father was the classic outdoorsman. He bought this land in the 1940s. It was mainly a sanctuary for wildlife, and for family too. It’s fair to say habitat conservation is the one thing he began that I have the sacred honor of continuing, albeit in a slightly different form: sustainable food production. HONORING OUR TEACHERSby: James Mauch
from issue: 32-1
Book Reviews
• People
Art • Eric Sloane• History
• Teaching
I believe that there exist many great practicing teachers, some of who deliberately set out to become one and others who may have never graduated from college but are none-the-less excellent and capable teachers. I would hazard a guess that many readers of Small Farmer’s Journal know more than one teacher who falls within this latter category. My grandfather, and artist and author Eric Sloane, were twosuch teachers.
THE FARMER & THE HORSE Farming Systems & Approaches• People
Starting a farm
• Video
In New Jersey — land of The Sopranos, Jersey Shore, and the Turnpike — farmland is more expensive than anywhere else. It’s not an easy place to try to start a career as a farmer. But for a new generation of farmers inspired by sustainability, everything seems possible. Even a farm powered by draft horses. 13TH ANNUAL U.S. DRAFT HORSE AND MULE PLOWING CONTESTby: Christy Logan
, Ed Atkins
, Mike Atkins
from issue: 41-4
People
Plowing Contest
• Plows
The 13th Annual U.S. Draft Horse and Mule Plowing Contest was hosted again this year by Mike and Joyce Downs on their farm located in Olympia, KY. This is the 2nd year for the competition to be held on this majestic piece of land located in Bath County, KY, where teamsters did not have to do the dead furry mambo in the back part of the field. This year’s competition was held in late October 2017, hosting 21 teamsters from six different states.A DAY IN THE LIFE
by: William Coolidge IIIfrom issue: 30-3
People
Having animals to tend again, chores to do, is a kind of rebirth for me; a second childhood, a return to yesteryear. Like a new blade of grass, or a fresh sprout poking up through the brown, winter-soaked leaves at the edge of a field, I am coming alive once more, feeling a sense of déjà vu, a usefulness and sense of value and accomplishment that was sorely lacking during all those years working at the prison. Living things are depending on me again for sustenance, understanding and compassion, patience, maintenance and punctuality. ICE, HORSES AND A LESSON LEARNEDby: Judith Graybill
from issue: 39-4
Livestock •
People
Horses • Ice
Just inside the barn door hangs a coil of blue and white rope, and a big scary lesson. The rope is one of those things that doesn’t have a specific job, yet does about everything. It has been used to drag logs, pull cars out of mud, guide a falling tree in the right direction, or be threaded through the come-along on butchering day. It was the first thing I grabbed when Jacinth, our filly, went throughthe ice.
A TRIBUTE TO A PENNSYLVANIA FARMERby: Bruce Baker
from issue: 29-1
People
Westmoreland County, in Southwestern Pennsylvania in the late 50’s and early 60’s was largely an industrial area. But backed up in the hills and valleys and eastward towards the Appalachian Mountains were some of the prettiest little farms to be found anywhere. Two hundred year-old farmsteads were testimony to the hard work and persistence of those who had been before. The tractor had largely replaced the draft horse throughout much of North America by that time. But tucked back into those hollows and on those steep hillsides could be found a surprising number of “big horses.” CONFESSIONS OF A CRO-MAGNON MANby: Ken Akopiantz
from issue: 27-3
How-To & Plans
• People
Training
First off these days I usually refer to myself as “that Bozo with the lines.” I like to tell people that up till now everything that I have done with horses was wrong. It is time to do it differently. I hope that my horses can forgive my explosions and dubious communications. I have had horses for 8 years now. There was a time a few years back where I actually thought that I knew what I was doing. THE REAL WORK KARBAUMER FARMby: Ryan Jones
from issue: 38-4
People
A bold and opinionated German, Klaus moved to the midwest over 25 years ago from Bavaria and is currently running the only tractor-less farm in Platte County, Missouri operated by draft horses. Karbaumer Farm tries to “live and grow in harmony with Nature and her seasons” and produces over 50 varieties of chemical-free, organic vegetables for the community, providing a CSA or the greater KansasCity area.
FJORDWORKS: A HISTORY OF WRECKS PART 2by: Kerry Gawalt
, Stephen
Leslie
from issue: 35-3
Farming Systems & Approaches• Fjordworks
• People •
Starting Your Farm
Training
It is always fascinating and at times a little disconcerting to watch how seamlessly the macro-economics of trying to make a living as a farmer in such an out-of-balance society can morph us into shapes we never would have dreamed of when we were getting started. This year we will be putting in a refrigerated walk-in cooler which will allow us to put up more storage-share vegetables.HOLIDAY OFFERS
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