I know most if not all farmers balk at the idea of farming being a peaceful life. I know that it is not peaceful in a physical sense, ie: that you get to lay outside in beautiful pasture looking up at the sky, gently chewing on a piece of straw while trying to make out shapes in the fluffy white clouds as the cattle lazily graze around you. The feeling of peace that I feel, the envy that I feel when I think about farming comes from that sense of security you have with not only knowing exactly where the food came from, but from being able to go out and pick whatever fruit or vegetable it is that you wish to eat from your own property. And outside of the growing season, I imagine that you have a root cellar and pantry full of the food you spent all spring, summer and fall growing, harvesting and preserving. As a farmer, you can sleep soundly after a hard days work knowing that you can feed yourself and potentially a whole community of people. There will be no blizzards, road blocks or broken down cars that might keep you from getting to your own pantry. That being said I realize that a full pantry and root cellar comes with aching joints, blood, sweat and tears and then there is the devastating heartache that would come from crop failures. My naive belief is that on a diversified farm where there is loss, there would also hopefully be production because you didn't put all your eggs in one basket.
I know I'm happiest when I can run out to the garden and pick what I need for dinner. What I prepare usually smells and tastes better because I had to work for it. Opening a package of thawing garden tomato puree in the middle of January is downright exciting. I can't imagine what it would feel like to know that someone else is experiencing a delicious, fresh and healthy meal because of the work that you did.
Here is a link to Kristin Kimball's web page.
http://www.kristinkimball.com/
Here is a link to Kristin Kimball's web page.
http://www.kristinkimball.com/
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