I'm the daughter of a farm boy and a small town girl. I grew up on
a four-acre piece of land in Texas with two little brothers, and I
spent my childhood picking dewberries, climbing the post oaks, exploring
the creek bed, and riding horses. This blog is where I'll be exploring
my farm roots through a mixture of memoir, literary analysis, and
cultural analysis (with perhaps the odd recipe or two).
My
mom's maternal grandparents had a dry farm in Trenton, and her dad
was raised by his grandparents, who were farmers. My mom grew up in
Logan, but they had enough property for a few fruit trees, sixty
beehives, and a huge garden. My dad grew up on a farm in West Bountiful,
where they grew asparagus, corn (field and grain), tomatoes, wheat,
potatoes, barley, and hay, and they raised cows, hogs, and hens. Dad's
dad was a hardworking farmer until literally the day before he died, and
he and Grandma both grew up on farms. When I was a year old, Dad got a
job in College Station, Texas, and we lived there until I was seventeen.
I was kind of a tomboy when I was a
kid--I suppose that's what happens when you have two younger brothers,
no sisters, and no neighborhood girls to play with. I would lead my
brothers on our adventures in the backyard and pasture. We never
succeeded in persuading Dad to make us an actual treehouse, but that
didn't stop us from equipping every good climbing tree on the property
with the trappings of a tree fort. We slung buckets attached to ropes
over the branches, so that food and gear could be hoisted up to
whichever of us was keeping watch from the treetops. We'd dig in the
creek bed like pirates looking for treasure. We also had ground forts
between the fig trees. The low branches with their huge leaves made the
perfect cover, and luckily no fire ants ever built mounds there.
Every
May, the dewberries would grow all along the fencelines of our
property. Dewberries are like the best kept secret of our part of Texas
(and wherever else they grow, I'm sure). Nobody with neatly groomed
fencelines would ever discover them, and certainly nobody with a
suburban lawn. They were left to the country neighborhoods like ours,
with untamed grazing pastures sparsely fenced with barbed wire. Over
time, the vines coil and loop their way up fenceposts and sprawl out
along the wire. The tiny, spiny thorns are more wicked than any metal
barbs, but it's worth scraping up your hands to get the berries waiting
amongst them. After we finished stripping the berries from our own
fencelines, we'd drive out in search of other fencelines where nobody
had noticed the berries growing, and we'd pick those too. We usually had
enough to make a few dewberry pies, add berries to our cereal, make
dewberry ice cream for the church ice cream socials, and then still have
enough to freeze a few gallon-sized bags.
For about ten years, my dad would plow the northwestern portion of
the pasture (the part you had to drive past when you were entering the
subdivision) for a garden, and we would grow corn, squash, cucumbers,
tomatoes, cabbage, and I think I remember doing potatoes one year. When
me and my brother Ben were young enough to be tricked into thinking that
work was fun (this was before Josh was old enough to help), the whole
family would work on the garden together, and we loved eating corn on
the cob at the end of the summer. But as I got older, I got more and
more irrationally terrified of bees and wasps (despite having never been
stung), so I'd start weeding, but as soon as a bee or wasp wafted over,
I would sprint back to the house in panic. Eventually, Ben and I were
so resistant to working on the garden and Dad was so busy with his
actual job that he gave up on it and fenced it off as extra pasture for
the horses.
We got our first horse when I was about seven. He was a gorgeous
mustang, and Dad named him Wiley (because he's wild) on my suggestion. A
few years later, after we'd boarded a couple of other horses for a
while, I wanted a horse of my own, and Dad found a gorgeous paint mare
for sale. But instead of buying it, he made me work for it. Together, we
mowed the lawn of the mare's owners for two years. At the end of the
two years, I had Scoot (the mare) and Dad had Skip (her half-brother, a
paint gelding). We trained them and rode them until I was seventeen,
when we moved to the suburbs in Utah and couldn't keep them on our
property anymore.
We also raised Barbados sheep (which look a lot like goats). These
sheep are extremely cute for the first few months of their lives, but
because they don't grow wool, they just end up looking kind of fat and
lumpy as adults. Much less cute. We got two pregnant ewes, and when they
gave birth, we made the mistake of playing with the new lambs too soon,
so one of the ewes abandoned one of her lambs. I named him Little Buddy
and bottle fed him until he was old enough to graze. He would bleat
loud enough for me to hear him inside the house every morning. The plan
with these sheep was to eventually slaughter and eat them, but that plan
failed. Three of the lambs (including Little Buddy) died because they
overate and there was some kind of toxicity thing with the bacteria in
the grass, and then a neighbor's dog got into their pen and killed one
of the ewes. In the end, we only slaughtered one, and let the last one
run around with the horses until she thought she was a horse too.
I LOVE that picture of you with your sheep!
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