A couple of months ago, Chris had the opportunity to speak at the Missouri Governor's Conference as a representative of the dairy industry. In honor of National Ag Week, I'm sharing his comments here, as one dairy farmer just telling his story.
Hi, I’m
Chris. I'm a dairy farmer in Missouri. My wife and I farm
together with my parents. We milk Holstein cows, farm acres of row crops, in addition to raising
about replacement heifers on local pastures. Now, my wife, she grew up on a hog farm in
northwest Iowa. So, naturally we never,
ever argue about which animal is better…about which animal smells better, looks
better, tastes better…
As I was
thinking about what I wanted to say here today, my thoughts were drawn to my
little 11 month old daughter crawling around and to my wife who is carrying our
next child due in March. And I thought
about my great grandfather who lost everything in the Great Depression and
about my grandpa who started all over again with nothing. I thought about the five generations before
me who have dairy-ed in Missouri; about the challenges they faced, the
opportunities they made, the families they built.
By nature,
agriculture draws families; or better put, agriculture grows families. As a result, many of us in agriculture have
been here in Missouri for generations; perhaps one generation, or three
generations or six or more. And each of
those generations have seen their fair share of challenges. They’ve seen droughts and floods; humid,
oppressive summers and icy, bone-chilling winters; blights and insects; weeds
and failed crops; and a financial or farm crisis or too. And yet somehow, here we are today.
Imagine the
challenges that those early settlers of Missouri saw as they came up the river
or through the forests. And yet, they
saw the potential, the rough forms, the uncut gems that could be someday. And in the fields, in the forests, in the
pastures, in the barns, they sweated and they bled and they dreamed and they seized
the opportunities they were given. Heck,
sometimes they made their own opportunities where there were none and built a
rich heritage of agriculture in the process.
But we are not without
opportunities. We have plentiful, high
quality feed that’s readily available and affordable: corn silage, soybean-meal, soybean hulls, distiller’s
grains, brewer’s grains, corn gluten, cottonseed, alfalfa, and plentiful pasture land. We have micro-creameries popping up across
the state, reintroducing people to specialty dairy products. We have a good water supply supported by
plentiful rainfall. In the end, though, it’s
not about those physical challenges and opportunities; it’s about how we react
to them.
Similarly,
we have the opportunity to impact our communities through those employees who
work on our farms. Not only does capital
flow back into the local community, but so does character. I strongly believe dairy farming is
character-building work…trust me, I grew up scraping manure and chasing calves. The character that our
employees develop…well, they carry that character and work ethic back into
their communities, into their churches, into their families. As I said before, at its core, agriculture
grows families.
Each of us
up here represents a different industry with different opportunities and
different challenges.
It’s a pleasure to be a part of that agricultural community here
in Missouri, and a pleasure to be with all of you here today.
Wow this was quite a touching post, never knew farmers went through all this, Chris did a good job writing all this. Hope to see more posts from you soon, keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the update, very nice site.. battery sprayers
ReplyDelete