Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Diverse Corn Belt Project looks at agricultural diversification
Deere settles right-to-repair lawsuit for $99 million; judge still has to approve the deal
YEDA: From a kitchen table to a national movement
Insurer: Illinois farm collision claims reached 180 last year
Indiana to invest $1 billion to add jobs in ag, life sciences
Illinois farmer turned flood prone fields to his advantage with rice
1,702 students participate in Wilmington College judging contest
Despite heavy rain and snow in April drought conditions expanding
Indiana company uses AI to supply farmers with their own corn genetics
Crash Course Village, Montgomery County FB offer ag rescue training
Panel examines effects of Iran war at the farm gate
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   

Eschewing an alternative lifestyle to return to ranch

By LEE PITTS
It's the Pitts 

I was sifting through the rubbish and rubble of our lives because my wife said I had to start throwing away some of my valuable junk. It’s pretty depressing when you look back on your life and realize it can be summed up in 23 apple boxes.

The first box was from my "farming period" when I partnered with my ex-brother-in-law on 100 acres of hay. It was a time in my life I’m not proud of; a cattleman stooping so low to become a plow chaser and dry land dirt farmer.

As a rancher it sickened me to be turning the grass upside down and hoping it wouldn’t rain on our hay. Whoever heard of a rancher not wanting it to rain? I felt so ashamed.

I started wearing lace-up boots and getting to the coffee shop two hours before sunrise to commiserate and complain with my fellow farmers. I joined the co-op, went to farm auctions and almost joined the Farm Bureau.

I started getting free magazines, hired an accountant and was on the lookout for any government programs I might qualify for.

I laid awake nights worrying about organophosphates, whatever they are. I pasted a "Save the Bees" bumper sticker on my truck, opened an account at Farm Supply and learned an all-new language with words like fungicides, biocides, insecticides and herbicides. It all sounded like "The Far Side" to me.

I was too proud to ask my fellow farmers what a carbofuran or nematode was.

I even met the farm advisor, although I noticed he kept his distance. Perhaps it was my Eau de Cow deodorant. I was no longer welcome at brandings, and my horse Gentleman wouldn’t even look me in the eye. He had barely forgiven me for raising sheep … and now this.

The first box I dug into was a good example of how low I’d stooped. It was full of baby tractors. My wife took one look and said, "Throw those toys away."

"They aren’t toys," I replied as I sat there pushing and pulling them down straight rows, making engine noises like, "Vroom, vroom" and "zoom, zoom."

"I can’t throw these out," I added. "This is the best investment I made while I was a farmer. I might even be able to get back half of what I paid for them." I didn’t tell her that, as usual, I had bet wrong and my toys were the wrong color, a nauseating orange, instead of the much-valued green or red.

I hid the box so my wife wouldn’t find it and then hit the mother lode: four boxes crammed full with farmer caps. Instead of having the name of an auction market or ranch on them, they had words like Accel, Hinder, Case, Deere and Checkmate embroidered on them. As if I played chess!

My wife thought she’d fool me by suggesting we only keep the hats that pertained to ranching.

Little did she know the chemical companies came up with names for switch-hitters like me, with hats that said Stirrup, Spur, Roundup, Mustang, Lasso and Wrangler (I had one on my rump; I might as well have one on my head).

I even found a cap with the word "Rattler" on it, although I think it predated the rope of the same name.

I made one pile that was for caps that conveyed my macho image, like Patriot, Sniper, Swagger, Esteem, Empower and Venim. That’s when I noticed that farmers probably aren’t the best bet to win a spelling bee, considering how they spell Venim and Sevin.

I immediately discarded the cap that said "Widow" on it, feeling like it sent the message I was looking for love. Likewise the cap that said "Nudrin," as if I was remotely interested in a clothing-optional lifestyle.

Before I’d even gone through the first box I realized the error of my ways and "went back to the blanket." That’s what Indians called tribal members who "went white" but came back to the tribe.

So, I got rid of the evidence, cleansed myself and went back to others of my tribe: cowboys, large animal vets, semen salesmen, artificial insemination practitioners and semen collectors. I did this knowing it’s risky because, judging by the evidence, some of their caps could get a guy arrested.

 

The views and opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and not necessarily those of Farm World. Readers may log on to www.LeePittsbooks.com to order any of Lee Pitts’ books. Those with questions or comments for Lee may write to him in care of this publication.

10/21/2015