Originally posted on Eliza Lynn Taylor's You Never Know! January 27, 2013...
Living in Northern Wisconsin is a lot of fun for a lot of people. I am
not one of those people. I do not enjoy snow or the sports one would
engage in when it snows. I like to fish, but there is no way I am going
out on a frozen lake to do so. I'm from Florida, so the cold and I do
not get along, and I absolutely do not like snow.
That being said, for farmers wintertime should be a time of
semi-restfulness, right? Don't count on it. Crops have to be planned for
spring planting and equipment needs to be maintained so it actually
works come spring and summer. Animals have to have extra care,
especially if they are kept inside a barn, after all, either way, they
can't feed themselves and there isn't any grass to graze on. If a farmer
has a dairy, forget about any rest. As much as snow gets in the way and
adds more work, it is also a necessary evil. Economic impact on the
community that depends on it aside, snow, and a lot of it, is needed for
soil moisture when planting time comes around. A good layer of snow is
needed to protect hay fields. It keeps some warmth in and the freeze
out. Doesn't make sense, does it? Snow also helps weigh down the grasses
so that the freezing cold and ice isn't able to heave the delicate
plants and kill them off.
We got some snow, but not a lot and it got really cold. Then we got the
January thaw, which is temperatures in the forties that got rid of what
little snow we did have. Then it got cold again, as in way below zero.
I'm going with the notion that all that nice alfalfa and clover we
planted is not going to come up this year. Also the unseasonal warmth we
had last year during January and February sent our fruit trees for a
loop. They bloomed out and then the blooms of course froze when winter
returned and we got no apples. It affected the entire state's crop of
apples and cherries and other berries and fruits that grow up here.
There is a good possibility of more of the same this year.
Now comes the 'fun' part. It got so cold last week that our entire water
system froze. We've been having to take a torch to the cow watering
system, as in pipes, bowls, and mechanisms so they could drink for
several weeks now. We have a barn full of cows so that is a lot of water
bowls and pipes. When I say the entire system went down, I mean no
water to anywhere, including the house. We had to use an old drag-type
spray rig to water the animals by hand (think buckets) and buy water for
the house. Thank goodness we have relatives nearby so we could get
water for the animals. After finally giving up getting things going on
our own, we had to call a well company to get the ice out of the lines. I
give up using the automatic watering cups for the cattle though. Until
it warms it a bit, I'll just have to keep on using buckets. Even though
there are a lot of cows, it takes longer to thaw the lines than to just
give them a bucket and babysit them to make sure they don't dump it over
accidentally. The barn cleaner chain also froze down so we couldn't run
the chain to clean the beds out. I thought we were doomed to the old
Armstrong method (two strong arms, a shovel, and a wheelbarrow). The
tractor can be used, but it still has to get to the tractor, which
cannot fit into the bottom of the barn where the animals are. My poor
husband spent hours with a sledge hammer breaking the ice loose so we
could get that cleaner going again. He's not too keen on the Armstrong
method either for cleaning.
Next week, it's due to get way below freezing again and we might have to
do this all over again. Thankfully we got some snow and so we pushed a
nice pile around the building where the well is to keep some of that
heat we keep going in there where it belongs. So, wish us luck.
Think this is unusual? Probably not. Farming is like that. On good days,
the work is not too bad, the equipment works the way it's supposed to
and things go smoothly. I do enjoy my cows in spite of all the work, and
bucking hay and scraping stalls is some great exercise. But the bad
days tend to be really bad, and most farmers know what I'm talking
about. Like to gamble? Skip the casino- go into farming.
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