RichZ
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2001
- Messages
- 1,858
- Tractor
- Kubota 4630 with cab and loader
The perception that farmers are wealthy is killing this country. I'm a farmer, and **** proud of it. My wife and I own a goat dairy, we also sell free range eggs and raise fiber sheep. I also have an off farm job to make ends meet. And we barely make ends meet, even though to the untrained eye we are a very successful farm. With the rising gas prices, feed and hay prices rise, They have to. I used to do my own haying, but I don't have the time for it anymore. As Robert can tell you, haying is a hugely labor intensive job. I couldn't hay and tend my livestock, so I have to buy my hay and feed,
I pay my farm help $10/hour. I have one kid who's been to prison on drug charges, and is trying to turn his life around. He can't get a job anyplace else, and when he managed to get work it was at minimum wage. He's thrilled to be making $10/hour and learning a trade. I pay him, and the other kids who work for me, before my wife and I figure out if we have the money to go to the grocery store. If we can't, we eat a lot of our own free range eggs and lots of pasta.
If not for small family farms like us, Americans would only get their food from corporate farms or foreign countries. Do you think foreign food products are as safe as ours????? I highly doubt it. As a goat dairy, I am inspected by the state monthly, they take milk samples and we have to maintain our product by very strict parameters. I'm not complaining, I totally agree with these regulations. They keep our food safe. I know for a fact that other countries do not have our standards. Maintaining these standards is EXPENSIVE. I could run my farm for half the cost if I didn't have to maintain these standards, but I wouldn't want to even if I could. I believe that American farmers have a responsibilty to maintain the safest and most wholesome food supply in the world.
Most of us farmers are in this business because it's something we believe in and love. If you figure out what we, the owners of the farms make per hour, you would probably be shocked. We don't come close to minimum wage. I get up at 4 AM, feed my livestock, milk my goats, and get ready to be at my day job at 8AM. My farmhelper comes in at 6:30AM and works until 4PM. My wife works the farm fulltime.
We are not wealthy, I suspect most of the members of TBN could buy and sell us. But we believe in what we do. I spend many nights staring at the ceiling wondering how I'm going to pay my feed bill. My wife and I often have to figure out which bill we can afford to wait on and which we have to pay now. Yet, to most people, we run a very succesful farm.
We have three tractors, a 1951 Ferguson TO-20, a 1967 Oliver 1550, and last year, we went further in debt to buy a Kubota 4630, because I needed at least one tractor that I could operate in a snowstorm without having to run a salamander under it to heat up the frozen hydraulics. We also have 2 pick-ups and a cargo van( 2001 Silverado, 1999 F250, 2000 GMC cargo van).
Does our equipment make us seem wealthy??? Maybe so, if you didn't know any better, but I need it to operate my farm. I need two fwd pickups to run my farm, and I use the cargo van as my livestock trailer, as our livestock is small.
I'm not complaining, I wouldn't have any other life, but stating that farmers are wealthy, just ticks me off. Try to appreciate the people who grow your food!!! We're not making the big bucks that many others do. And we don't care, we believe in what we're doing. But, please, just have a little respct for the people who work hard to give you some safe and wholsome food for your family.
OK, I'm off my soapbox. Sorry for the rant.
I pay my farm help $10/hour. I have one kid who's been to prison on drug charges, and is trying to turn his life around. He can't get a job anyplace else, and when he managed to get work it was at minimum wage. He's thrilled to be making $10/hour and learning a trade. I pay him, and the other kids who work for me, before my wife and I figure out if we have the money to go to the grocery store. If we can't, we eat a lot of our own free range eggs and lots of pasta.
If not for small family farms like us, Americans would only get their food from corporate farms or foreign countries. Do you think foreign food products are as safe as ours????? I highly doubt it. As a goat dairy, I am inspected by the state monthly, they take milk samples and we have to maintain our product by very strict parameters. I'm not complaining, I totally agree with these regulations. They keep our food safe. I know for a fact that other countries do not have our standards. Maintaining these standards is EXPENSIVE. I could run my farm for half the cost if I didn't have to maintain these standards, but I wouldn't want to even if I could. I believe that American farmers have a responsibilty to maintain the safest and most wholesome food supply in the world.
Most of us farmers are in this business because it's something we believe in and love. If you figure out what we, the owners of the farms make per hour, you would probably be shocked. We don't come close to minimum wage. I get up at 4 AM, feed my livestock, milk my goats, and get ready to be at my day job at 8AM. My farmhelper comes in at 6:30AM and works until 4PM. My wife works the farm fulltime.
We are not wealthy, I suspect most of the members of TBN could buy and sell us. But we believe in what we do. I spend many nights staring at the ceiling wondering how I'm going to pay my feed bill. My wife and I often have to figure out which bill we can afford to wait on and which we have to pay now. Yet, to most people, we run a very succesful farm.
We have three tractors, a 1951 Ferguson TO-20, a 1967 Oliver 1550, and last year, we went further in debt to buy a Kubota 4630, because I needed at least one tractor that I could operate in a snowstorm without having to run a salamander under it to heat up the frozen hydraulics. We also have 2 pick-ups and a cargo van( 2001 Silverado, 1999 F250, 2000 GMC cargo van).
Does our equipment make us seem wealthy??? Maybe so, if you didn't know any better, but I need it to operate my farm. I need two fwd pickups to run my farm, and I use the cargo van as my livestock trailer, as our livestock is small.
I'm not complaining, I wouldn't have any other life, but stating that farmers are wealthy, just ticks me off. Try to appreciate the people who grow your food!!! We're not making the big bucks that many others do. And we don't care, we believe in what we're doing. But, please, just have a little respct for the people who work hard to give you some safe and wholsome food for your family.
OK, I'm off my soapbox. Sorry for the rant.