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Critters & Kids

Rock, Paper, Scissors

There are many milestones children reach as they grow. The first tooth, first steps, first words, all endearing little goals that babies achieve at their own pace, often with a crowd of supporters cheering them on. As kids get older, it’s a first sleepover, a first day of school, a first goal scored and other celebratory milestones that memories are made of.

Not all common milestones are cause for celebration, however, such as that of the first self-administered haircut. Now, I try not to compare my dear offspring to one another. For the most part, they have achieved milestones at their own speed which is wonderful. I will note, however, that our older twin boys never did reach the milestone of cutting their own hair. They’ve enjoyed cutting and crafting and using scissors in regular supervised activities, however they have never turned their efforts towards themselves (or each other). So imagine my surprise when Little Sister grew very quiet one morning and instead of finding her, I discovered a trail of golden curls scattered throughout the house with a very scared looking girl at its end. “Sorry,” she whispered, barely audible.

It could have been much worse. What looked like an awful lot of hair didn’t really amount to much in the end. She took a little off the front, near her bangs, and added some creative layers at the very back of her head which are now developing into cowlicks that more or less can be tamed into a ponytail.

I certainly did a more thorough hack job on myself when I was her age and for a good while I was sporting what people consider now to be a trendy pixie cut. Back then, there was definitely nothing trendy about my coif, and I mostly just looked like a little boy with an obligatory pink barrette affixed to whatever hair I had remaining. Not satisfied with cutting my own hair, I cut my teddy bear’s fur too. Mid-cut, I realized this was a pretty poor decision and I was likely to get into trouble, so I did whatever any enterprising kid would do – I hid it under the couch cushion. All was well until my mother made this grisly-and-confusing discovery, at which point I had some explaining to do.

Our own sweet flaxen-haired little Edward Scissorhands also does not limit herself to just cutting her own hair. She has been hard at work cutting other things as she deems necessary. Feeling warm? That can easily be remedied by cutting numerous small holes in the front of a perfectly lovely shirt. Do you hate it when your washable marker doesn’t colour quite right? Why don’t you take matters into your own hands and trim it to a finer point with your brother’s little green scissors? Feeling snacky? Grab yourself a piece of bread and don’t worry about opening the bag, just cut the top right off of it, as close to the loaf as possible. It seems there is no problem in her life that can be solved with scissors.

Of course, one could argue that perhaps more careful supervision and removal of scissors may actually prevent her snipping stunts. That may be true, but I will point out that she has accomplished most of these tasks with child-friendly scissors that I can barely cut paper with.

Some kids collect rocks and other kids entertain themselves with paper. But when the going gets tough, our tough little gal goes straight for the scissors.

Categories
Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

The Help

We are starting a new phase of ranching for our family here at Lonesome Dove Ranch, and it’s a stage I have been anticipating for a long time. Of course, I’m referring to the fact that our kids are slowly but surely starting to earn their keep. Opening and closing gates, fetching things, even helping remove twine on bales when we feed cows…the balance is slowly starting nudge in our favour. Of course, having an extra set of little hands pitching in around our ranch isn’t the primary reason for having children, but it certainly can be a nice little side effect. There’s never a shortage of work that needs to be done.

One of the best things about life on a farm is working alongside your family. I’ve done a straw poll of ranchers and farmers over the years and when asked what they love most about ranching, their answer almost always includes working hand in hand with other generations. This response has come from young ranching mothers and grizzled, grumpy old cowboys alike.

Probably the best gift my parents ever gave me was the gift of growing up on a farm. When you’re a kid, you don’t realize what you are learning when you’re out in the field or riding shotgun or picking rocks but as a parent, I’m realizing that the lessons never stop. We talk about how and what and why we are feeding our cattle. The kids watch the numbers on the scale increase and they notice how they go down when we put out the feed. They learn the importance of monitoring the health and welfare of our animals and are quick to notice anything that might not be feeling well. They learn about nature and keep watch for the snowy owl that watches for us every day when we check the water bowl. It’s probably the broader values of daily chores, like responsibility and safety and adaptability, that sneak up on them and me too when we’re donning our ski pants for the 83rd time this season.

I usually like to do things quickly and efficiently so I can move onto the next job on my to-do list. However, when you’re packing around three willing helpers aged three to five, molasses in January moves faster. Their staunch independence also slows things down because whatever chore they task themselves with, they insist they must “do it myself!” From them, I have learned that I am darn short on patience and that I really need to relax. Even if it takes five minutes for one kid to pick twine from a bale, that’s okay. Where do I have to go that is more important?

The help hasn’t been limited to farm work either, I might add. Every time we make a meal, or throw wet clothes into the dryer, or wash dishes, a chair magically appears beside us with one to three children ready to get in the fray. I even went to check on a kid the other day after I noticed he was a little too quiet and I discovered he was folding towels. Folding! The towels weren’t folded to my standard specifications, but I’m learning that it doesn’t matter. They were folded! By someone other than me!

According to most people, we are in some of the very best years of our lives. I’m not quite sure when they started and I don’t know for certain how long they will last. I just know that for now, the help is willing and sweet. And I can use all the help I can get.

 

Categories
Beef & Business Ranch & Real Life

The Year of the Cow

I have had a variety of New Year’s Resolutions over the years. They vary from the unattainable — a couple favourites are drink more water and just be a nicer person already — to the more realistic goal of having more haircuts in 2014 than the solitary cut I had in 2013. (Totally nailed that last one, by the way!). For this upcoming year, I thought I would appeal to my literary side and decided to read more books than I had in the previous year. It seemed like a good plan until not one, but two family members reminded me that I had actually made that resolution last year.

My favourite resolution of all time however, was in 2011 when I randomly resolved to do a better job at promoting the beef industry. I would love to say that there was a deeper meaning behind my goal, that perhaps I was concerned about the growing disparity between the farmer and our urban consumer counterparts, or that I had just had an altercation with a vegan, but there was no real method to my madness. It was just a New Year’s Resolution.

But I really meant it. For most of the year leading up to January 1, 2011, I was on maternity leave with my twin babies and on our ranch full time. For the first time, I was finally able to be involved more in the 7am-6pm aspects of our daily ranch life instead of just running a second shift after I was home from my day job. Being more present, both physically and mentally, on our operation reminded me that cattle ranching is important to me and that it’s a valuable part of the food system and our economy as well. Hence my subconscious was thoroughly promoting my beefy New Year goal.

My resolution also coincided with a new program called the Cattlemen’s Young Leader that was just getting off the ground. This national mentorship program, through the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association, was accepting applicants to participate in a yearlong journey of learning, leadership and networking in Canada’s beef industry. I was intrigued so I thought I would apply and see what happened. The fact that I actually clicked the online application button with about twenty minutes left to spare before the midnight deadline perhaps would point to a need for a procrastination resolution someday but that might be better in 2017. Or 2018.

I was a lucky CYL candidate and my experience was second-to- none. I was reacquainted with old friends and classmates, met several inspiring people, and toured some amazing facilities. It reinvigorated my appetite for learning and my love for all things beef. I gained a better appreciation for all segments of the beef value chain, from the science behind forage and feed grain production, through to feedlots, packers, retailers and chefs. The experience paired me with a mentor that I’m close with to this day, and she and others continue to encourage me to share ranch stories, including those in this column. The experience also reminded me that when you gather several 18-35 year olds from across Canada with similar interests, a lot of fun can be had. Also, given the spread in ages and demographics, a natural division occurs between those that are excited to stay up all night long and those who are excited to get a full night’s sleep. (As the mom of young twin babies, I totally fell into the latter group).

CYL will be accepting another crop of applications starting on January 1, 2016. If you’re interested or want more information on this mentorship program, visit www.cattlemensyoungleaders.com.

Technically 2011 may have been the Year of the Rabbit. But for me, that year and every year to follow, really is the Year of the Cow.

Happy New Year and all the best in 2016!

Categories
Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

Picture Perfect

‘Tis that magical time of year when homes are decorated, goodies are baked, families gather, and holiday traditions are upheld. One of my favourite things during the season is receiving updates from friends and family through their annual Christmas cards. It’s fun to open the mailbox and see stacks of notes from loved ones near and far, most of them including the quintessential family photo. You know the kind, the ones where impeccably dressed children beam at the photographer, while parents appear to be in love with each other, their children, and the world in general. Everything is perfect.

We too usually include a family photo in our Christmas card and I can tell you right now, obtaining that pretty picture can be a challenge. Whether you endeavour to get a flawless family picture or simply attempt to have all of your family members in one place at a single time with photographic proof, the process is easier said than done. The frustration level increases if the ages of the children are five or younger and it multiplies if any of your family members are male. There seems to be a lot of bargaining and organization and gnashing of teeth to get the show on the road.

Sometimes I attempt to capture a Christmas-card-worthy photo of my husband and me with our angelic little darlings and I set up a tripod, explain the process to everyone and hope for the best. Other years I get a photographer who has much more skill and patience than I to take our photos. This involves setting up an appointment, because while our family is often together, we are usually sporting mended chore clothes and dirt-spattered faces, hardly the shared vision that the photographer or I have for a shoot. I schedule a time, but usually have to reschedule at least once before I can finally herd our family towards our adaptable (and did I mention patient?) photographer.

Immediately prior to our session, I’m compelled to trim our kids’ hair as it grows shaggy seemingly overnight. The children have a (not entirely unfounded) fear that I will accidentally nick them during their trim, which means I usually have to distract them and reassure them that I won’t draw blood. Then repeat the process for all three heads.

Securing an outfit for everyone is the next step. Where are the shirts? Should I iron those shirts? Do I even have an iron? Now I’ve found the iron, but do I have an ironing board? I procure an ironing board but I think I had better dust it before I do anything else. Each child is later clothed in their predetermined outfit, and the real question remains, how do I keep everyone’s freshly ironed clothing clean for longer than two minutes?

After getting everyone else dressed, I quickly dress myself yet all of a sudden nothing fits right, nothing matches and somehow I become the person delaying the process. I quickly throw on a shirt that I purchased from a grocery store four years ago and hope it looks…fresh.

When I take the pictures ourselves, I’m pleased if at least one photo out of twenty captures 80% of the subjects looking sort of happy. I’ll take what I can get. Photographers however somehow magically capture lots of amazing pictures, probably because they know what they are doing and how to direct us. Lovely photos are the end goal, and yet I’m always drawn to the outtakes. Whether it’s a grumpy toddler photobombing the shot, or someone’s squinty (or angry!) eyes, or a parent embracing-but-really-gently-restraining a child, those photos seem to be the most authentic representations of a picture session. Part of me would like to actually use one such outtake for our Christmas card some year. It would certainly stick out.

From our house to yours, have a wonderful picture perfect Christmas.

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Categories
Beef & Business

Pedal to the Metal

There is nothing quite like buying a vehicle. Some people may actually view a vehicle purchase with excitement but for the record, I am not one of those people. I can’t help but experience that gnawing feeling that I’m about to drop a lot of money on something that actually loses value the nanosecond I drive away. But like it or not, vehicles are sort of mandatory for ranchers, and I’ve come to accept that purchasing said vehicles are a necessary part of life.

I’ve imported vehicles and exported vehicles, I’ve bought used ones and new ones. Some trucks I truly missed after I traded them in and others I may have burned rubber in an effort to distance myself as quickly as possible.

Over the years, I’ve developed a bit of a strategy when shopping for vehicles. I want to get the most money possible out of my trade-in, while spending the absolute least amount of money possible on a replacement. That’s my big secret. I’ve also made a few observations along the way:

1. Bring a wingman, but choose the right wingman. Having a co-conspirator along is helpful for many reasons. You need someone to buoy you when your spirits flag or provide a strategic distraction when you need a moment to collect yourself. In my case, my little girl and I have successfully purchased two vehicles now so she is my current wingwoman, and will insist on a potty break at precisely the right time.

2. Know your numbers. Do your homework ahead of time so you know what you can and will spend, and write it down. This will save you much pain and confusion when trying to decide if a “Doorcrasher Deal!” or a “Major Blowout!” is indeed the deal of a lifetime when spread over the recommended 96* monthly** payments.

*Nothing is ever a deal when another several dozen months are added on.

**Ranchers don’t get monthly paychecks. Monthly payments can be sort of irrelevant.

3. Communicate what you want. This was a good reminder for me during my last foray to dealerships. I started looking over trucks that the salesman recommended but nothing fit. I asked about a few others in the line and his response was that they were pretty bare bones models. “They don’t even have carpet in them!” he exclaimed. Well now, my interest was piqued. It turned out the basic models he thought wouldn’t suit me were exactly what I wanted. Manure-caked truck upholstery is the bane of my existence, he had me at “no carpet.

4. Don’t look desperate. If you wait until you need to buy a vehicle, salesmen will be all over you like a bloodhound tracking a fox. I learned this little tip while waddling the lots (eight months pregnant with twins) with my husband on a crisp -45C day. We weren’t just kicking tires and boosting test drives, we were there because we weren’t going home until we purchased a vehicle. It perhaps was not the best negotiation strategy.

5. Be ready to pull the pin. This is closely related to the previous point, but it’s an important one. If you’re unsure, indecisive, or waffling even a bit, walk away. You may actually invite a better deal if you start to walk, or you may simply walk away from a ride that isn’t right for you. Either way, you won’t regret it. Just don’t bluff, save this move for when you really don’t mind leaving that vehicle behind.

Our recent truck shopping experience was fruitful and we found something that worked for our family. The only trouble is, it’s so darn clean and the windows chip-free that I’m not quite sure I know what to do with it. My solution? Pack it full of snacks, car seats, a tow rope, chore clothes, stock medicine, my camera, fencing tools, and anything else I need…. and drive it like I own it.

Categories
Critters & Kids House & Homestead

What Goes Around, Comes Around

Hand-me-downs are wonderful. I’m practical, and let’s face it, frugal enough to realize that clothing my children in brand new garb would be expensive, unfulfilling, and in many ways impossible to keep up with. My kids are growing quickly and they are relatively tough on their garments so when another shipment of hand-me-downs shows up on my doorstep, I welcome them with open arms. And I do what any mom would do – I drag the boxes down to my basement and add them to the dozens of other containers already in there. I have sorted and categorized clothing for two different genders ranging in ages of zero to ten years old and I’m not even certain how it all happened. I swear.

It started out innocently enough when we had our twins. I would be in town, running errands, and someone would give me a couple (or twenty) bags of boys’ hand-me-downs. “How generous!” I thought, “These will definitely come in handy.” And they did. Before long, I had enough tubs of clothes to outfit our two boys up to and including age five, for any and all weather they could encounter. I had enough clothes on hand that I wouldn’t have to do laundry for at least six weeks if I was brave enough to leave it that long. (I wasn’t).

I kept my stash of boys’ duds in case another kid came along. We did find another kid in the cabbage patch, only this one was a girl child which meant the boxes of clothes I already had stacked to the ceiling were rather irrelevant. Word soon got out that we had a little girl, however, and more boxes, tubs and bags of tiny pink clothes started arriving from rural municipalities near and far. I’d find items sitting in my unlocked vehicle in town or I would come home to a porch full of clothes. In an effort to get clothes out of their house and into mine, donors would even use travelling teenagers to courier clothing to me. What teenager wouldn’t want to transport frilly pink baby clothes to my ranch when they happened to be in the area?

There are a few side effects of hand-me-downs, including the occasional sentimental parent who stops to reminisce about when their own child could still fit in whichever item my child was busy wearing out. I nod sympathetically, because I’m starting to understand. There is also a slight risk that my kid will be unintentionally incorporated into the original clothing wearer’s family at a rodeo or branding, but those things happen.

Our guest room became the command centre for my accidental collection of gently used kids’ clothes. We are always just one unexpected guest or a new haul of hand-me-downs away from chaos, but we still encourage both. With my shipping and receiving policy, as quickly as the bags come in, something of equal space must go out. So beware, if you leave your vehicle unattended or I happen to be driving by, you too may find a bag (or twenty) of hand-me-downs that you can contend with.

That’s the beauty of hand-me-downs… My kids can pass their outgrown items on to other kids to breathe new life into old clothes. These jeans and shirts and jackets are just waiting for a fresh set of grass stains, a different scuff on the boot, a new adventure. Some jeans have holes already pre-worn in the knees, some of the boots are even pre-caked with mud and a bit of manure, but all clothes have been worn with love. Then when I see your kid making a mud pie, or helping with chores, or just being a kid, I’ll take a moment to wistfully tell you “I remember when my kids could still fit in those. It feels like it was yesterday.” Because, it really does.

 

Categories
Critters & Kids House & Homestead

Cuts Like a Knife

Last year after a bit of a chaotic fall, we took a hiatus from carving pumpkins. The kids were slightly disappointed but their overabundance of Hallowe’en candy eased the pain, their sorrow was short-lived. I may have actually missed carving the pumpkins more than the kids so this year, I was intent on accomplishing our ghoulish goals. One of my kids and I carefully selected shiny, orange pumpkins, we all discussed designs, weighed the options, and I sharpened my knives. I was pretty excited. I mean, for the kids’ sake, of course.

I’ve always appreciated a good pumpkin specimen and had a pretty large pumpkin patch when I was a kid. I used to grow so many pumpkins I sold them to a nearby grocery store, back before marketing products from gate-to-plate was even a “thing.” I sold small pumpkins for a dollar, medium-sized pumpkins for two, and three bucks would get you a nice, large pumpkin. Of course, being a little kid, I needed some level of support from an adult for my entrepreneurial adventure. My mom possessed an ever-useful drivers’ license, which was instrumental in getting the pumpkins from the origin to my market destination. She graciously donated a large portion of her garden in a prime low-lying area toward my cause, and probably more time than I actually realized as well.

My pumpkin patch gradually dwindled over the years, probably following a drought and I returned to growing pumpkins simply for my own decorating purposes. As I got older, I created spider webs, bats, cows, scary faces, black cats and full moons in my little round pumpkins. I preferred to concentrate my efforts on the impractical, never actually creating any useful like a pie or a loaf. Even in university, somewhere between mid-terms and Ag Bag Drag, my cousin and I would carve out time in our schedules to cut up a pumpkin or two. Come to think of it, most of my carving memories really came from adulthood.

This year, specifically for my kids’ enjoyment only (not mine, I swear!), we cut the tops off our pumpkins and scooped the seeds out, elbow-deep in orange slime. Not one to let children play with knives, I set forth cutting their designs out under careful supervision. One pumpkin was carved into a traditional jack-o-lantern, one was carved into a Ninja Turtle, and I carefully cut Cinderella and Prince Charming in a carriage on the third one. It was a tedious process, one that even extended over a couple of days, but I gave it my best effort. For the kids.

In one last selfless act of parenthood, I ruffled through their total mixed ration of Hallowe’en treats after the little gaffers were asleep. I took it upon myself to sort out a few goodies I deemed inappropriate for their tender, young palettes. You know, really bad things like M&M’s, rockets, full-sized chocolate bars, and licorice. I disposed of the excess sugar carefully, one treat at a time, until all I had left was a small pile of wrappers. Someone had to do it. For the sake of the children.

Categories
House & Homestead

Boots on the Ground

Farming and ranching has a reputation as being a “boots on the ground” sort of profession. Of course there is much more to farming than day-to-day chores and it is a lot more complex and technological than what some would believe. There is something special, however, about playing a role in food production where you literally get your hands dirty and have, well, your boots on the ground.

Having your boots on the ground, however, requires a lot of pairs of boots. Literally.

In our family of five, we seem to have no less than four pairs of boots each. Cowboy math will tell you that I have at the very least twenty sets of footwear sitting by the door. There may be work boots, riding boots and possibly town boots (if you’re lucky). Then you have rubber boots and winter boots, and depending on your budget and level of sentimentality, you can break down each category further into a sub-category of old winter/riding/work boots and their newer, not quite broken-in version.

When it comes to our small fry, while they’re feet are indeed smaller, their boot, er, footprint is no less a problem, as there is usually a pair or two that are slightly too big set out waiting beside the pair they are currently outgrowing. Throw in some running shoes, sparkly princess preschooler shoes, and even an errant pair of high heels kicking around from the last fancy function I attended, and the whole shoe situation gets out of control in a hurry.

All of these boots, and then some, occupy space in my porch. My entire porch is a landing zone for veterinary supplies, loads of groceries, items to return, eight pails of potatoes, toques, sunblock, mitts, bug repellant, work gloves, water bottles, 457 cowboys hats, and an underused vacuum. The space also doubles as my laundry room which just adds to the mix with hampers of dirty and clean clothes, laundry soap and mending.  But the boots….they are the crux of the matter.

It turns out, I’m not alone. I made a call for help to my farming peers the other day, asking for their tried and true boot storage solutions. Some gals institute a one-pair-of-shoes-by-the-door policy, others defer to a gigantic bucket or tub that everything gets thrown into. Various shelving units were suggested to me from porches across rural North America, ranging in size and style from Swedish-designed furniture warehouses to homemade rustic planks to Pinterest-worthy beautiful baskets. But everyone agreed, the struggle is real. And the struggle shall continue as long as there are feet that need to be outfitted with boots. It’s a good problem to have, really.

I could take all the footwear in my porch and their corresponding values and trade them in for one very pretty pair of Laboutins or Jimmy Choo heels. Sure, these haute couture shoes would be absolutely frivolous and highly impractical for my lifestyle, but I guarantee they would not take up more than 144 square inches of precious real estate in my porch. Plus, they would be pretty. But my kids and husband would be barefoot, and I’d probably lose a toe out in the barnyard, so we all know that isn’t going to happen.

At this time of year, on the cusp of late fall and early winter, all I can do is survey my porch and know that this is as good as it’s going to get for a real long time. I haven’t even brought up the topic of coveralls and their good, better and best versions (x 5) that I will soon have in heaps in my porch. I just have to put my best boot forward.

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Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Outstanding in Her Field

I love a good news story but most days, good news is hard to find in the media or online. So when I came across a positive story hitting the mainstream media about women, agriculture and Saskatchewan, I was intrigued.

Tiffany Martinka, a farmer and agricultural professional from northeast Saskatchewan started a grassroots social media initiative called #womenofharvest15 and it has been gaining major traction. It all started when she sent a tweet asking women to share photos of themselves from the field, the combine cab or from wherever they happened to be helping out during this busy season.

For anyone unfamiliar with Twitter, it is an online social media forum that allows users to “follow” people they are interested in following, and share information to their own “followers” all in 140 characters or less. Brevity is key. (See what I did there?). Twitter users select a handle, for example mine is @tara_m_davidson, and you can send out photos or videos and messages to other interested people who follow your posts. You can use “tags” such as #farm365, #westcdnag, #loveCDNbeef or #ranchlife and other users searching for those tags will come across your brief, and theoretically witty, tweets. There are a lot of farmers and agricultural organizations using Twitter and I use the platform to market cattle, follow livestock conferences and events, or to find answers or provide solutions for mystery plants, animal health conundrums and other things. I follow everyone from our current Prime Minister to a peanut farmer from Alabama to Glamour magazine…I guess I have diverse interests. I also happen to follow Tiffany (@MartinkaTiffany) who inspired the #womenofharvest15 campaign.

Women have long played a valuable role during harvest, whether it is operating a combine, swathing, baling or trucking grain. Women also seem to get more than their fair share of work when it comes to keeping the revolving hampers of laundry flowing, servicing and fueling equipment, running for parts, providing nutritious meals for their family and field crews, and paying the bills for all the necessary-but-expensive agricultural items our male counterparts keep on buying. And like it or not, often women farmers are the ones to prop their family up during challenging times, low yields, poor weather, or yet another break down.

The #womenofharvest15 campaign shines a bright light on all of that. I’ve seen women tweet harvest photos from all across Saskatchewan and Canada and beyond, with many American farm women jumping on the (grain) cart too. There are pictures of friends, family members, former Agro classmates, daughters, mothers, grandmothers, pregnant gals and even infants, all proud to be out in the field, doing their part to bring their harvest home. I even participated myself, sharing a collage of three different pictures with each of my kids while I was out baling and raking.

Saskatchewan farms are incredibly diverse and whether harvesting means combining grain, baling hay, weaning calves, or managing the farm office, you can count on women to get the job done. The demands are constant and the stress may be high but the #womenofharvest15 movement demonstrates farmers supporting each other at a time of year when they may need it most. It’s one more example of fearless female farmers seeing opportunity all around them while they are out, standing in their fields.

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Categories
Beef & Business

Party Lines

I normally enjoy following politics. Be it federal politics or provincial politics or an impending election in a neighbouring jurisdiction, I take a keen interest in the issues and policies at stake and the players in the race. These days however, I’m finding it a little hard to do.

We’re slightly over the half-way mark in what feels like the longest federal election campaign of all time. That’s partly because it is the longest Canadian election campaign in modern history. By the time the polls open on October 19, Canadians will have been treated to eleven weeks of promises, announcements, and candidates making awkward attempts at relating to everyday people and posing for cheesy photo opportunities. These are the folks who claim they will be the best choice in leading our country through the next several challenging years. I’m not so sure about that, but if this race were a competition in playground bullying and below-the-belt wisecracks, all of these folks would do just fine.

Social and conventional media continue to play a major role in shaping this campaign and in many (all right, most) ways I’ve been disappointed. Today’s political news headlines are becoming eerily similar in focus and quality on both sides of the 49th which is disconcerting. Maybe I’m struggling a bit because I haven’t heard anything concrete regarding issues that impact me and our ranch, yet I’ve been subjected to the intimate details about former candidates and how and when they urinate. To be fair, the “Peegate” scandal I’m referring to brought forward a useful point about the importance of parties vetting candidates before allowing them to represent their values. But, it was a little too much information. Let’s keep it classy, Canada.

I want nitty gritty policy details about agriculture, more about parties’ stances on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, climate strategies to deal with drought and water security, and party views on consumer pressures like GMO-labelling. I’m very worried about the economy and I don’t want finger-pointing, but rather am looking for specific information on parties are going to deal with different economic scenarios. I’m not interested in media sensationalizing two- and three-year old tweets made by campaign managers, which simply reminds us all that the Internet never forgets. I would, however, like some information on positions about the grain storage and freight crisis or supporting infrastructure for associated industries.

I guess I still have more questions than answers with respect to this election campaign. As a small business owner and a parent of young children, I’m focused on the future and I need politicians that are as well. If I’m unclear on certain issues that are important to me, I’d better do some research and make some decisions. I shouldn’t rely on media or anyone else to help me decide which way to vote, the responsibility lies with me as it does with all individual voters.  The stakes are simply too high.

There is an old ranch saying that if you “hang onto the cow’s tail, she will pull you through.” I’m not sure who exactly will be the best choice to pull Canada through the next four years given the tumultuous economy we are heading towards, not to mention other global and environmental challenges that will impact all of us. Whether you’re spending too much time at the back end of a cow or simply trying to follow today’s election campaign, you’ll probably be subjected to a large amount of crap. But this is the hand we are dealt with and the very worst thing the public can do is nothing at all.

Get informed. Go and vote.

Categories
Critters & Kids

The Wheels on the Bus

We had a pretty big milestone last week for our family, and as with most momentous occasions it was bittersweet. The big yellow bus drove into our yard for the first time and our twin boys hopped on to head into their first day of Kindergarten. It was inevitable. Our kids couldn’t stay babies forever and I wasn’t about to try my hand at home-schooling just to ease my apprehension. But it still smarted a bit.

Earlier this summer, I was excited about the impending first day of school. I know the boys will learn new things and meet new friends. Now they will have other adults whom they can plie with questions like “what is on the other side of space?” and “what is more important – the sun or the clouds?” As twins, they will go together and like always, I know that they will look out for each other. It wouldn’t be all bad.

As the summer wore on though, I couldn’t help but realize things will never quite be the same and the boys felt it too. One of the boys asked me to print a picture of his sister so he could pack it with him so he wouldn’t forget what she looked like. The other little boy wistfully wondered how many loads of bales we would haul in without his help. Secretly my Other Half and I wondered the same. And our youngest (the girl with an apparently forgettable face) asked where her “pack pack” and lunch kit were, declaring that she would need them because she’ll be riding the school bus too. Her earnest statements made me think I wouldn’t be the only gal to shed a tear as the bus pulled out of the yard.

The boys boarded the bus without even a backward glance, so quick in fact, I couldn’t snap the classic picture of them and their bus driver. The day seemed to crawl by but they finally arrived back home full of news and information and packing almost-full lunch kits. I asked them why they didn’t eat more and they simultaneously said they were “too busy” and there was “no time,” but I think it was because they were so excited. They were a bit fuzzy on the details as to who was on their bus or who was in their classroom, but they retained a surprising number of facts regarding the school milk program. My young rock collector fished some rocks out of his pocket that he picked up from this new previously-unexplored playground territory. My other son, an unapologetic over-sharer, informed me that he told the bus driver “a lot of stories. A lot!” he added for emphasis. No doubt they will share their fair share of ranch stories with any willing or even unwilling ear, regardless of how good or bad they might be.

My earlier twinges of doubt didn’t cloud the fact that there were and will be many fun times during school. Our children are sure to have a long future of track and field days, Christmas concerts, field trips, and endless games of knuckles sprinkled throughout their homework, exams and bus rides. And like it or not, Little Sister will enjoy the next two years of having unfettered access to her brothers’ farm toys and corral set-ups while they are at school.

With backpacks full of carefully labelled school supplies and heads full of curious questions, it really wasn’t a matter of whether or not our boys were ready for Kindergarten… the question was, was I?IMG_6521 (2)

Categories
Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

Picking and Choosing

It’s summertime in Saskatchewan and that means it is prime rock-collecting weather for young children everywhere. Ahhh, the rock collection…. I mean, who didn’t collect rocks as a kid? I had my little red Edwards coffee tin of rocks carefully stowed in my parents’ garage just like everyone else. Consequently, it’s only fair that my own kids have picked up the endearing little habit and have been collecting precious pebbles in their own coffee cans, plastic containers and even Ziploc bags for the last few years. My one son especially loves his rocks and I often come into the kitchen to find his entire collection laid out on my heirloom dining table, sorted into piles according to shape, size and colour. He has a keen eye for spotting petrified wood in particular, and my flower pots and flower beds are almost overflowing with all of his findings.

When I think of the numerous adventures (or misadventures) that my mom has had with rocks I realize that collecting them might be hereditary, a genetic predisposition that perhaps skips a generation. My mom and son share the same enthusiasm towards a good sedimentary specimen and she “ooh’s and aah’s” more than most over my son’s latest discoveries. Together, they paw over the goods and as I listen to them, I realize I had better make room for many more rocks that are likely to find their way to our humble homestead. I’ve seen this behaviour before.

Mom’s interest in rocks, and dirt for that matter, seemed to evolve from a young age. She started out making mud pies and ended up with a degree in soil science, collecting more than a few stones along the way. For one particular geology lab she had to purchase a rock specimen collection and packed it to school. After accidentally leaving her sack of rocks on the bus, the driver called her back to retrieve what he must have thought was the World’s Heaviest Lunch Bag.

As a rock hound, mom would always keep an eye out for the most unique varieties on our farm, especially a nice chunk of petrified wood. Each spring my family would drive up and down our fields methodically, picking rocks into the back of the truck box and dumping them all on the rock pile. All except for a few gems that my mom had discovered and had to bring back home to place in her garden or somewhere special.

My mom liked to collect rocks from the many places she visited and didn’t let the law get in her way. Once, on a trip to a National Park (that shall remain nameless), we stopped by the side of the road along a mountain pass and she walked to a nearby pile of rock rubble. Finding a nice rock, she thought nothing of loading into the vehicle with us to add to her collection back at home. Upon her return to the truck, there was a note on the windshield from someone reminding her that removing rocks from a park was an illegal activity. Oops.

Mom even bought a box of rocks at a farm auction one time. Paying a sum of $1, mom became the proud owner of someone else’s lifetime rock collection, and I must say it is a beautiful collection. The original curator was a trapper who spent many years out on the prairie. Each of his rocks were unique and beautiful and I’m sure they all would have had a special story attached to them.

My little boy comes by his love for rocks honestly and I can only hope he stays on the right side of the law to acquire them. Watching my mom and her grandson discuss the fine attributes of his latest rock discovery is another example of how you can find beauty all around us if you have the right attitude.

Some people pick rocks, and some people choose them.

Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Can’t go over it. Can’t go under it.

When it comes to fencing, I’m better at some jobs than others. I’m fairly adept at placing the post-pounder into just the right spot. I’m getting better at pounding in miles of staples because there was only one direction for me to go as I couldn’t really get any worse. Mending fences however, is not my forte. I can (sort of) get the job done but it’s not very pretty and the wire may not be especially tight. The cattle are courteous and respect the fix but we all know that it doesn’t meet my husband’s exacting fence-fixing standards.

So it struck me a bit odd when my Other Half said he had a special fencing project that he needed help with and I was the best one for the job. Stranger still, he elaborated that we didn’t need a pounder, or even staples or wire, but I had better bring my swimming togs. Normally when you’re spending the day fixing fence, you want less skin exposed, not more, so I was obviously growing more doubtful about this project with every detail that was divulged. In hindsight, he maybe should have told me to pack a pleasant attitude too.

Earlier this spring, we constructed some new fences and there were a couple of wetland areas that hadn’t been secured yet. We needed to wade into the water, install some anchors, and affix the wire to the under-water anchors. My husband couldn’t think of a better way to enjoy some quality time with his favourite wife than wading through the cattails, swatting mosquitos. He added that other couples were likely enjoying a refreshing dip in their local waterholes over the long weekend too and there was no reason we shouldn’t either.

We had a few jobs to do together that day. Around mid-day when the water was sure to be nice and warm (i.e. stagnant and malodorous), we headed to our destination, parked the truck, stripped down to our swimwear and entered the water. Usually with tasks of this nature, there is no shortage of traffic driving by at exactly the wrong moment but in our case, we were pretty lucky. There were no additional bystanders except for our herd of curious bred heifers that kept circling back to inspect our work, perplexed.

I experienced a few benefits from our fencing excursion. I’ve done some work assessing wetlands in the past, but never from within the wetland so I finally had the opportunity to experience sediment trapping first hand with the squishy, squelchy mud. Also, I had the opportunity to pull a few old posts out of the fence line that I’ve always wanted to retrieve but never had the chance. And of course I was reminded that I should always be at least somewhat skeptical of my Other Half when he invites me on an adventure.

Sometimes there is no way around a situation other than literally getting your feet wet. When you can’t go over it, and you can’t go under it, you’re left with just one option – you have to go right through it.

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Pastures & Prairie Ranch & Real Life

The Green Green Grass of Home

I love haying season. I love the smell of hay, the anticipation of walking up to a swath to see if it’s dry, and the sound of a baler whirring across a field, provided the sound is indeed a whir and not a clank. I suspect most ranchers love seeing hay bales dotting a field because they know that in just a few short months, they’ll feed those very bales to their hungry cows when the weather is a brisk -40C.

I suppose one could learn how to make hay from books, or by researching information on-line. The topic was probably covered extensively during one of my 8:30am classes back in college, but I can’t tell you for sure. You could attend a workshop to learn about the best method for cutting your crop, letting it cure to an appropriate moisture level and baling it at precisely the right time.

Luckily, I just learned about haying from my dad.

As long as I can remember, haying was an exciting time in our household. In the early days, Dad made square bales, but when I was still pretty little, he and I picked up a New Holland round baler from Mankota Trading and slowly towed it home, anxious to put it to use. We logged a lot of hours together in the field that summer and for many summers after that – cut, bale, repeat. I learned how to listen to the way the swath rustled so you could tell if the hay was cured. Dad taught me about the pros and cons of conditioned versus swathed hay and how and when to feed test. We would watch seagulls swoop down to eat the grasshoppers and the hawks dive down to eat mice as we baled the swaths. We observed watchful does who would usher their fawns to the next strip away from us as we cut.

In Dad’s mind, there was nothing worse than having rain fall on a swath that was curing. Mom and Dad would obsessively follow the weather on the American Weather Channel, as that was deemed to be the most accurate at the time, looking for signs of impending thundershowers. Notes were made about humidity levels and the length of time it was taking for the hay to dry and Dad would assess the situation and cut a very specific amount of the crop to reduce the chance of having rain fall on it. I should probably mention that while I don’t like to have swaths rained on to this day, I don’t exactly go to the same lengths that Dad did to avoid it.

Dad enjoyed making hay, selling hay, and calculating (down to the penny) how much each bale cost to make. Dad loved to talk about hay too. This became problematic when I would drive four hours home from school to visit my Other Half. He would arrive to pick me up for a date only to end up engaged in an enthralling discussion about hay with Dad for a couple hours. Neither seemed to notice (or more truthfully care) that this was interfering with my date night.

This is our first haying season without Dad, but he hasn’t been far from my mind. He no doubt would have some choice words to say regarding the low yields and the sporadic showers that produced just enough precipitation to stop us from our field work but not quite enough to measure in a rain gauge. Conversely, an as experienced hay seller and exporter, Dad would be dancing a jig about the record-setting hay prices across the province and beyond.

My son and I were baling one day, and as we went up and down the swaths, we talked about Grandpa, reminisced and shared stories. We also talked about when to cut and how to tell if the hay was ready to bale and we talked about how this years’ crop is slim pickings. My son watched the hawks and gulls circle overhead and land nearby, searching for their prey. We spied a coyote and kept our eyes open for ducks in the swale.

I’m not always ready for life when it comes full circle.

After a while, my little boy went home and I kept on baling. But I wasn’t alone. Out in that field, bale after bale, someone somewhere was riding along with me.

Categories
Critters & Kids

Learn to do by Doing

There are few programs available for kids to participate in today that are greater than that of 4-H. I’m between seasons, if you will, with 4-H at the moment. It’s been a couple decades since I’ve participated as a youngster myself and our own children are a bit too young to join just yet, so at this point I’m more of an occasional volunteer and an interested observer of the numerous and diverse projects that are out there. It was some recent occasional volunteering that got me thinking about 4-H and the values that it continues to instill in youth today.

As a kid, I participated in a sewing project for a few years and later on a craft project. Now as an adult, I recognize that I’m not exactly going to craft my way out of a drought, or sew myself a mortgage payment, but participating in these projects was less about the tangible outcomes and more about the intangibles. I didn’t notice it at the time, but partaking in 4-H was training me to learn how to work with others, meet new people, and take on different challenges. I learned the proper way to conduct meetings, I did some public speaking, and of course I photographed my projects with my mom and dad’s Polaroid camera, documenting them in my record book. I even ended up on a curling team where we somehow won a medal in spite of my participation. I had fun and learned fresh skills and I didn’t even realize it.

I recently had the opportunity to assist with a marketing judging exercise for several groups of youngsters at the regional 4-H show. I really didn’t know what I signed up for when I said I would help, but the faithful adage “learn to do by doing” worked for this grown-up and I figured it out as I went. Marketing is a new judging category and it is a useful skill for young members to develop in today’s savvy world. There were kids of all ages who were eager to learn about what makes a good display advertisement, how and why we should advertise and the role that marketing can play in their own beef projects.

I started out each discussion asking the members to think about the types of advertising and marketing they experienced in their daily lives, partially to help guide the discussion, but maybe more because I’m snoopy and curious about the daily life of a 4-H pre-teen. I got answers like “I see lots of ads for hay” and “I’m phoning people who may be interested in buying my steer” and quickly realized these kids are probably well on their way to teaching me about the finer points of marketing.

The kids who participated were polite, they were articulate, and they were respectful. They asked thoughtful questions, made valid points and listened closely. The most commotion I encountered was having to break up some adolescents who had spontaneously formed a group and were quietly discussing moisture and the price of hay. I hated to interrupt them (I was trying to eavesdrop and learn a thing or two!) but alas we had to stay on time.

The experience left me feeling optimistic and thinking that there is a lot of potential in the youth of Saskatchewan. There are many kids out there with a firm grasp of reality and a lot of common sense, and I have no doubt that they will be excellent leaders in our communities. If our future lies in the hands of teenagers who are matter-of-factly discussing local forage conditions, I am perfectly good with that.

If you aren’t involved in 4-H, think about becoming involved. If you’re a kid, you can join a local club and if you’re an adult, maybe you would like to be an audience member at the next Achievement Day or are even interested in volunteering. It will be good for your head, your hands, your health and especially your heart.

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House & Homestead

From the Horse’s Mouth

We have a few horses kicking around the ranch that are of various shapes, sizes, and ages. We use our horses daily in our ranch work, whether it’s for moving cattle, or sorting cow-calf pairs, or treating sick animals, so they certainly earn their keep. Horses, however, do not stop grazing. Ever. Their heads are always pointed down and their prehensile lips are busy nibbling away at precious grass at all times. This can be a bit of a predicament, as we like to keep the horses relatively close to our yard, for ease of catching and saddling them, yet they will quickly eat the grass in our nearby fields that we would rather reserve for our cattle. Especially in years, such as this one, where grass is slow to grow.

Another opposing predicament I find myself in at this time of year is keeping up with yard maintenance, namely mowing our grass. While we’re still hoping the grass in our pastures and hay fields will gain some much needed momentum, the grass in my yard seems to be growing at a rapid pace and that grass can sure get away on a girl.

On one hand, we’re challenged with mowing the grass in our yard. On the other hand, our horses need grass to graze close to the yard. I think you can see where I’m going with this… yes, this challenge becomes the quintessential opportunity. Pound in a few temporary rebar fence posts, string a flexible electric wire, set up a water trough, grab some willing (and hungry) horses and voila! You too can have your very own high-intensity, low-frequency rotational yard grazing system.

We’ve learned a thing or two about using equines as environmentally-friendly lawnmowers and we’ve tweaked the system as needed. Some parts of our yard are large and square lend themselves nicely to being converted to a temporary grazing paddock. Other parts of our yard require fencing angles that are so intricate and awkward that if a horse sneezes or a post gets knocked out, all you’re left with is a mess of tangled string. Also, not every critter is suited to this type of grazing system. When you add an unfamiliar horse to the mix, inevitably the newbie is kicked out of the club and winds up on the wrong side of the fence. Including mules in my grazing scheme is also a bit of a wild card. Dexter, our resident smarty-pants mule, can be a willing grazer, however he bores easily. As soon as I see him coolly looking over the fence towards greener pastures, it’s time to move him out of the grazing program before he disrupts things for everyone.

There are some notable benefits of our grazing program, including being able to saddle and unsaddle horses from the deck of our house, enabling us to be rather lazy at the end of a busy day. The kids thoroughly enjoy the situation and have fun with their daily chore of watering the horses, and monitoring their general whereabouts. The horses enjoy the extra attention that they wouldn’t otherwise get if they were in a large pasture.

The set-up is not perfect, but of course, nothing ever is. There are steaming piles of road apples that are left behind in sometimes inconvenient locations. There is the odd unscheduled tree-pruning that takes place which isn’t always ideal. There are hoof prints in my flower beds. The ongoing problem I battle with flies in the yard is only compounded by the ponies’ presence. But let’s face it, seeing a couple of mares relax beside a hastily parked children’s bike is rather entertaining.

The grass isn’t always greener on the other side of the fence, but for us and our horses at this time of the year, it’s about as green as it can get.

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Categories
Pastures & Prairie

The Grass(land) is Always Greener

The third week in June is jointly proclaimed as Native Prairie Appreciation Week (NPAW) by the provincial Ministry of Agriculture and Ministry of Environment. Saskatchewan was once a sea of uncultivated wild grasslands, with needle grasses, wheatgrasses and hundreds of other plant species covering the landscape as far as the eye could see. For a variety of reasons far too numerous to mention here, there isn’t a lot of native prairie left in Saskatchewan. In fact, less than 20% of Saskatchewan’s native prairie remains, and that figure decreases slightly each year. NPAW is a nice way to bring attention to an important and dwindling provincial natural resource.

Over the past seventeen years, the Saskatchewan Prairie Conservation Action Plan (SK PCAP) has organized NPAW activities to engage with people about the prairie. You can learn more about their initiatives at www.pcap-sk.org . This year, SK PCAP is asking people to think about what they value about native prairie.

Naturalists might value native prairie because it provides a place of abundant wildlife and biodiversity in which they can study and gain understanding. Recreationists might appreciate prairie for its beauty and uniqueness, and the ever-changing wide open views.

Researchers and scientists may value grassland ecosystems because they can provide answers to questions they may be asking about interrelationships of organisms, populations of particular species, or how systems adapt and perform under various pressures.

Teachers and educators perhaps value prairie rangeland because it provides local real-life examples of how natural ecosystems function in a variety of settings. I hear teachers often commenting that they enjoy being able to open their students’ eyes to fact that Saskatchewan prairie is diverse, beautiful and alive.

Ranchers and farmers may value native prairie because it provides a sustainable source of grazing for livestock. This grazing resource is nutritious, renewable and requires few external inputs other than some barbed wire, posts, and a water hole. (Okay, I simplified it a bit here, managing range is not quite that easy, but that’s another story for another time!).

Plains First Nations people may value native prairie because it represents a critical link to their past. Their entire culture is rooted in prairie plants, geology, animals and topography. Archaeologists perhaps value prairie grasslands because they may be a sort of “final frontier” for northern plains artifacts. Out on the prairie, it may be easier to discover effigies and learn about the past compared with more disturbed sites like cities or crop fields.

Hunters and outdoorspeople may value native prairie because it provides essential upland and wetland habitat for birds, fish, and other wild game. Without habitats and corridors for wildlife to live, their populations would not thrive.

Prairie and its connected habitats, such as wetlands and rivers, are an integral part of the Saskatchewan landscape. They symbolize our resilience and our strength and are an important link to our history.

What do I value about native prairie? All of the above, and then some. Prairie grassland is important to our ranch for grazing, certainly. But native prairie also represents a way for my family to learn about the natural world, connect with our past, and understand the importance of conserving these precious ecosystems for the future.

How do you value native prairie?

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Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Battle of the Babes

These days, it seems like consumers are really taking an interest in what they are consuming and looking for more information on their food. I’m a consumer, I’m a mom, and I’m also a rancher (i.e. person who produces food) and I think it is fantastic that people are interested in learning more about the food they feed their families. The source of this information, however, is worth investigating.

A woman who calls herself the Food Babe (her real name is Vani Hari), is a former computer programmer-turned-self-proclaimed-internet-food-authority with a legion of followers who call themselves her Army. Ms. Hari widely markets her concerns about eating chemicals and the use of ingredients she can’t pronounce. I usually cook with ingredients like “potatoes” and “beef” so at first glance, her claims seem fairly innocuous. After further reading though, things kind of go off the rails for me and I realize that there isn’t much I can or should eat, according to the Food Babe, because it’s full of toxic and poisonous chemicals. Add in Ms. Hari’s feelings about preventing communicable diseases and her vapid post about how airplane cabin air isn’t even straight oxygen (er, no, the air we breathe on Earth contains about 78% nitrogen) and it becomes clear that we disagree a lot more than we agree.

Of course, I don’t think we should randomly prepare toxins for our families to eat. Yet, it’s worth pointing out that we are surrounded by chemicals all day long and it’s important for consumers to understand that. My favourite chemical, and likely yours too, is good old dihydrogen monoxide, known by its friendlier name as water. Acetic acid, another one, can be a terribly caustic lab ingredient. My favourite way to use it in my daily life is by dousing my French fries in it. I also use it when I clean my floor (on a biannual basis, but that’s another story). It’s vinegar. The poison depends on the dosage, and the corresponding fear should depend on the context. The Food Babe, with her pretty hair and make-up, is not always up front about that.

Several critics have started to speak out against the Food Babe and her methods, including Yvette d’Entremont, who refers to herself as the SciBabe. She has dedicated her work to debunking myths purported by the Food Babe and, well, anyone who makes strange claims with no scientific backing. With the sheer volume of bad information out there, SciBabe will have job security for some time. And if that doesn’t work out, she can always fall back on her former career as an analytical chemist with a background in forensics and toxicology.

Preparing food to eat is not easy. You have to buy ingredients, set time aside to cook, factor in people’s preferences and possible dietary restrictions, and the list goes on and on. Sometimes I nail it and my family is well-fed and happy. In years when I grow a garden, I can proudly cook tasty meals for my family that are sourced entirely from our farm. Particularly when it comes to beef, I can tell my consumers more than they would ever want to know about the steak on their plate, including the animal’s birth date, its dam’s grandpappy, and whether or not it liked long walks in the pasture.

People should absolutely take an interest in preparing and eating nutritious and safe food for their families, and I do too. I also know that I get tired at the end of the day, and sometimes I don’t care what makes macaroni and cheese that neon yellow colour, I’m just glad that I can get it on the table in nine minutes. Sometimes the “5-second rule” that relates to food falling on my floor extends into the “35-second rule” and when I can’t locally source an heirloom cucumber in Saskatchewan in January in -40 degree Celsius weather, I don’t stress.

Sometimes food is complicated and sometimes it’s not, but at some point, consumers need to make peace with it. After all, we should eat three square, nourishing meals daily, and while we’re at it, we better wash it down with the recommended eight glasses of dihydrogen monoxide.

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Ranch & Real Life

Love & Livestock

When I flipped the calendar over to the month of May, I realized that it’s been a decade since our Lonesome Dove Ranch officially registered as a business. That also means that my Other Half and I will be celebrating ten years of marriage this month. I am not an expert in either topics of love or livestock, however apparently I have at least ten years of both under my belt and it’s very difficult, in fact darn near impossible, for me to separate the two.

There is a lot of compromise in marriage and in ranching, and our place is no different. For example, I ignore my Other Half’s perpetual teasing about my advanced age. I am, after all, an entire 122 days his elder which practically makes me a cradle robber and my poor husband a young, defenseless victim. Meanwhile, my dear, sweet husband overlooks the fact that I just about ran him over with a post pounder on two completely separate occasions. Oops.

When listening to other farmers and ranchers discuss what they love most about agriculture, a common refrain is their joy in working together side by side with their family. For spouses, it certainly can be a blessing and a curse. At times, ranching and marriage are both rife with challenges, but sometimes just as quickly as things can fall apart, they can be put right back together again. Amid the chaos there’s just enough charm and wonder scattered about in a relationship with your spouse and a relationship with your ranch to keep you curious about what’s around the next bend in the road.

My Other Half pushes my buttons all right, but he also pushes me out of my comfort zone, challenging me to do things I’d rather not do, but afterwards I’m glad that I did. He’s shown me that sometimes you just need to take a leap of faith and everything will turn out all right in the end. In turn, probably due to some nagging, er, “effective communication” on my end, he’s discovered that a leap of faith that has been well organized and thoroughly researched is good too. As a friend once described us, my Other Half is the throttle and I am the brakes, and it’s a simple and true estimation of our relationship and our ranch. Sometimes you need to speed up but you have to know when to slow down too. We’re on the same team, but what we both lack in patience, we make up for in stubbornness, so there is still ample room for personal growth.

Our lives have been full of beautiful occasions like the birth of our children, many family milestones, some productive growing seasons, and the recent record cattle markets. Most times though, our lives are comprised of seemingly insignificant things. Moments like riding together through a pen full of cattle, or receiving a handful of spring’s first crocuses picked by little hands, or discovering that someone stapled a rope to all of the tough gates so that their bride can easily open and close them while they cruise on through – those moments are what make our marriage what it is.

Our version of wedding vows included the same old vague “in sickness and in health” and “in good times and in bad” stuff, but ranchers could stand to add a few caveats when tying the knot. It might be more realistic to add something more targeted, like “during drought and during flood, through record high and record low cattle prices, in both minus and plus 40C temperatures, and through sleepless nights and pre-dawn mornings.”

In my entirely inexperienced opinion on matters of love and livestock, I would conclude that marriage isn’t for the faint of heart…. and ranching isn’t either. And I wouldn’t change a thing.

wedding - tack room

Categories
Critters & Kids

Duck, Duck, Goose!

The return of the Canada goose is the quintessential sign and sound of spring as they honk their way home for the warmer weather. Canada geese are large and somewhat brash, they attract attention in parks and cities, they have parody social media accounts (i.e. @ReginaGoose on Twitter) and the Canada goose has even been blamed for air plane crashes. It seems they are always in the news, including a recent account of the ‘Costco goose’ who chose to get cozy near a Regina Costco store. Ironic, a goose setting up camp just meters away from a store that sells down-filled duvets and vests from their feathered brethren.

Here at the Lonesome Dove Ranch, we have our own goose stories. While I can’t say for sure that it’s the same pair, there is a pair of geese that migrates to our yard every spring, and persistently proceeds to nest. At best, they have entertained us with many a spring time adventure, and at worst, their nesting has been spectacularly unsuccessful.

Canada geese enjoy nesting in bales, and fortunately for these fine birds, we have a lot of different options for them to choose. It would be so nice if they would choose wisely for once. The first year the geese descended, they circled around, honked, and settled on the top bale of a straw stack that was two bales high. Out of all the bales in all the land, they chose the most precarious bale on which to nest. We gave them a wide berth, leaving the stack alone. We had really only built that particular stack in that spot to offer a bit of windbreak for our house so it was no hardship to leave the bales alone and we wished them well. As the story goes, the wind can blow fiercely at times, especially in our yard, and one day I arrived home to find the geese waddling around, confused, staring at the bale which had once housed their family but now was toppled over on the ground, having blown over in the wind. Their luck, it seemed, was bad.

Dejected and nestless, the pair of geese turned their attention to the heifers which were sharing their same home base. There was much posturing, pestering and territory-marking between the geese and the heifers who were pretty curious about their new playmates. After lunch one day, I was watching the bizarre and humorous dance between the birds and the cattle. The geese would hiss and flap their wings when the heifers would get too close, and the heifers would playfully trot off. Sniff (cows), hiss (geese), honk (geese), runaway (cows), repeat.

While watching, I noticed a nearby heifer who had laid down in a small hole, and was unable to get up. While it doesn’t happen often, sometime cattle will lay down, get over-centered and be unable to rise again, which can quickly lead to injury or even death. Being lunch time, my Other Half had just happened to stop in at the house and he and I ran out to rope and turn the heifer upright again. Indirectly, our tiny gaggle of geese had saved our heifer’s life.

The next year, the pair returned to try their luck with goslings once again. They dutifully tended to their nest, this time choosing a much wiser location than their previous one. Again, we left them alone and looked forward to seeing a clutch of goslings following behind mama later in the season. At daybreak one morning, I was enjoying a cup of coffee and staring at the geese nurturing their eggs when out of the corner of my eye, a shadow appeared. Flying up high, it grew larger and got close enough for me to see that it was a Golden Eagle. It majestically soared through the air, spotted the nest, flew down, plucked the nest and contents neatly off the bale and flew away with a nice light snack between its talons. For the second year in a row, we were dealing with these melancholy fowl.

Our geese returned for another year this spring, although for the last several seasons, they try to fly under the radar. No more saving lives, no more impressive acts, no more shenanigans… maybe maintaining a lower profile will result in some offspring one of these years.

Categories
Beef & Business

Skin Deep

At Lonesome Dove Ranch, we are all about tattoos. We truly value the role that tattoos play in self-identification and we especially like their permanence. Getting ink isn’t just a part of the culture for our ranch residents, it is actually a requirement for a specific demographic of our population. That’s right, if you are a registered purebred bovine, you must have a tattoo.

To reiterate, I am NOT talking about people. None of the humans that are kicking around our place currently have a tattoo, or nothing stronger than the temporary Ninja Turtle variety. I’m pretty sure it’s against the law to force a person to acquire a tattoo just so they could fit in at our camp, so the only critters around here that are required to sport a tattoo are the furry four-legged kind.

We tattoo our purebred cattle in their right ear with a designated and unique number, along with our registered herd prefix. Ear tattoos are a requirement of managing purebred cattle and this identification helps buyers and sellers do what they say and say what they do. Prior to entering specific shows or sales, cattle tattoos need to be verified, and it is a handy and permanent way of double checking the identity of an animal if they lose other forms of identification, like a drop tag.

Our expert tattoo artist has experience applying high quality ear tattoos in a variety of windy and dusty field conditions on thousands of animals. I don’t think I would request just any tattoo from our artist, no butterflies or maple leaves or anything like that, but his handiwork leaves clear and legible letters and numbers, which is a must in our business.

Possibly the only drawback of our cattle tattoo parlour process is the ink itself. Livestock tattoo ink is a thick, goopy paste, available in diverse colours and our colour of choice is bright green. While the whole tattoo process takes place in under fifteen seconds, things can get surprisingly messy in that brief time frame. Of course the calf’s ear and head usually get a little green, which later results in any excess paste rubbing off on the corresponding cow’s udder and muzzle. The tip table we use in order to safely hold the calf in place often gets a little ink on it as well. You also need to have a spot where you can set the tube of ink and the ink-covered tattoo instruments down. A nearby tail gate or table usually does the trick, but that means anyone who sets anything down within a two metre radius of said area has the potential to turn green.  Add some busy little helping hands into the mix as well as a few adult pranksters and no one is immune to sporting some creative, personalized ink of their own.

Over the years, I’ve washed ink off of coffee cups and casserole dishes, bathroom sinks and barn doors, and it fades away with time. Depending on how close you are to the tattoo process, it might be a good idea to wear clothes that are already green because you’re going to end up that colour anyway. If all else fails and you feel really committed, you can accessorize your new shade with matching clothes or even nail polish for a week or two.

It’s not always easy being a rancher and it may not always be easy being a calf, but in both circumstances, it ain’t easy being green.

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Uncategorized

High & Dry

Spring is here, according to the calendar at least, and with the warmer weather comes everyone’s favourite season – tax time. After turning over a new leaf last year, I’m actually not terribly stressed with tax preparation for the past fiscal year. An odd turn of events, however, has me slightly preoccupied with the tax records from previous years…the past thirteen years to be precise. You see, it turns out that it’s not a fabulous idea to store large volumes of important papers in cardboard folders in a storeroom immediately adjacent to a bathroom with a toilet that has the potential to overflow with (thankfully) clean water. By the time the aforementioned water travels through such a storeroom, winding its way throughout ones basement before saturating ones feet in their office, those boxes of receipts have soaked up floodwater like a sponge.

A few days of fans and dehydration dried my boxes of papers fairly well, but I wasn’t interested in returning the records to their rightful spot without a little consolidating and waterproofing first. Going through all the boxes, I took out the extraneous papers and envelopes, stacked the invoices and receipts together and flattened and squished them until I fit several years’ worth of chronicles into a plastic lidded container.

I discovered that nothing triggers a trip down Memory Lane better than analysing how much our farm spent on what items and where. My records pre-date the very existence of our farm, which brings about interesting reminders of the fun and games we endured starting our operation and farmstead. I found souvenirs of milestones like our first land purchase and old receipts from tinning the barn roof at the site that went on to become our farm yard. There was even some fiscal evidence of romance, with a pattern of expenses incurred by my Other Half that followed the main route from southwest Saskatchewan up to Saskatoon consistently over a four year period. During this time, it appeared my Other Half took me out on some dates, or at least that’s what the paperwork suggests. I even found some receipts for flowers. The flowers might have died long ago, but he still has the darn bill to prove that they did actually exist.

I came across bills for horses, dogs and cattle that were bought and sold over the years. There were happy recollections of good animals that we had the privilege of having on our ranch, most of them adding value to our operation. I found a receipt for Spirit, a horse we once had, who was small but mighty, a nip-eared little filly who was fun to ride. There was a statement for Tuck, our tough old border collie we bought in the fall of ’05 to replace Bud, my husband’s steadfast companion. I came across a variety of invoices for cattle, including one from the fall of 2003 for a package of bred heifers, some of which are still in production around our place. Compared with the market at that time, those exact same critters are currently worth double what we paid for them eleven years ago. It’s still hard to wrap my head around the shift in the cattle market. I don’t know where livestock prices are going, but I sure know where they’ve been after assessing old weigh sheets, sales slips and market reports. I kind of like where they’re at now.

If I could offer anyone a small bit of tax advice this season, I would suggest you do yourself a favour and keep those important papers high and dry. And once that important precaution is taken, buy your beau some flowers. It might not be a write-off but it will still be worthwhile.

Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Hear Me Roar

The month of March is Rural Women’s Month, officially proclaimed by the province of Saskatchewan. International Women’s Day was also celebrated earlier this month, and it’s important to understand the significance of these celebrations, especially if you have a pulse, if you were born to a woman, if you are a woman, or if you are raising a woman (or several women!). This month, I’ve been reflecting on the many strong women I’ve been fortunate to have as influences in my life, many of them from rural communities.

For generations, rural women have been known for being tough and resourceful, seemingly able to make something out of nothing. Today, women in rural areas are leaders in their communities, they volunteer and organize, they operate successful businesses, they create awareness about important causes, and do this all while keeping their own home fires burning. Rural women sometimes deal with challenges like being few in numbers and far from resources when compared with their urban counterparts. Yet compared to our grandmothers, we’ve come a long way, baby.

Running water. Indoor plumbing. Electricity. Refrigerators. Google machines and Smarty-pants phones that connect to the Interweb. Our foremothers probably couldn’t even imagine these daily conveniences that we can’t imagine our life without.

At least daily, I think of two women who have shaped my life and are indeed responsible for it – my two grandmothers, both rural Saskatchewan farm women. I didn’t know them well, yet I often relate their experiences, perhaps real and perhaps perceived, to my own life.

My maternal grandmother, a German-speaking Russian, immigrated to the prairies from Argentina with her family when she was four years old. After she was married, she had fifteen children, including my mom, the youngest. Midway through the birth order of her children, she had a set of twins, which I can’t help but compare to my own experience as a twin mama. Except that I had a washing machine, zero other mouths to feed, seven months of lead time to prepare for twin infants, and Pampers, so there really isn’t much to compare. My grandmother was widowed young and life dealt her many tough challenges which she handled because she had no other choice. Her poignant German sayings that have been passed down indicate to me that she was wise but also somehow maintained a sense of humour.

My paternal grandmother grew up in southwest Saskatchewan, in an area termed as the “heart of the Dust Bowl.” She was an accomplished cook, gardener and canner, no doubt establishing her skills as a young girl both at home and while working in the kitchen for another family in the area. In her wedding photo she looks beautiful and elegant, yet I see her hands are strong and know hard work. I’ve heard that she was a gracious host and would welcome anyone in for a meal that was prepared with care, even during times when the larder was running on empty. She took pride in her chickens and turkeys and grew a substantial garden to feed her husband and children for the entire year.

They were very different women, yet my grandmothers both endured challenges that tested their resourcefulness and tenacity. They were women of faith. They lived through droughts and crop failures and long, cold winters. They both buried children. They did without and persevered because they had no other choice. The stove needed tending, the potatoes needed to be peeled, the wash needed to be done, the noses needed to be wiped.

Through two generations, my Grandma Kohlman left a legacy of over one hundred descendants (and counting!), including farmers and pharmacists, accountants and administrators, nurses and musicians, chefs, teachers, and even a brain surgeon. Interestingly, my Grandma Hilda’s direct descendants are distilled down to me, and now my three children. Both of my grandmothers provided opportunities for their children and grandchildren, many who have channeled those opportunities into travelling, obtaining higher education or raising families of their own.

During times when I’m scrambling to put together a meal for unexpected company and serve it using one of Grandma Hilda’s spoons, or when I spontaneously apply one of Grandma Kohlman’s famous German sayings to a situation, I realize that these two rural women of the past continue to inspire this rural woman today. Let’s draw upon the strength of our heritage and celebrate our foremothers for keeping it all together so that we can too.

Categories
Beef & Business Ranch & Real Life

Pretty Paper

When I was a kid, I knew that I wanted to be a farmer when I grew up. I knew that I wanted to do other things too, but early on I knew that I enjoyed working with cattle, making hay, marketing products, and analysing the weather, all things that I thought would be important for operating a ranch. I did, however, miss the memo regarding how much paperwork and administration that would be involved with farming. I’ve had off-farm jobs in sectors well-known for red tape, paperwork and excessive form-filling, yet not one of those jobs has ever come close to the filing, recording and notation required with running our ranch.

For any farmer and rancher reading this, I’m preaching to the choir here, but if you’re not involved in primary production, the amount of administration and paper-pushing that is required to be a rancher these days might come as a bit of a surprise. The voluminous paperwork really seems to mount at this time of year too. There are bull sale catalogs, contracts and agreements, maps, manifests, forms, registrations, equipment manuals, calving data books, financial records, feed inventories, licenses, statements of net worth, design blueprints, warranties, and advertising to keep track of. Then we have pedigrees…oh the pedigrees. There are dog pedigrees, horse papers, and of course cattle registration certificates for any and all registered animals who currently or have ever called our place home. I’ve dabbled with international paperwork, importing and exporting goods and services like animals and tractors, and possess a filing cabinet full of forms and documents to show for it. I haven’t even brought up the day-to-day book-keeping, bill-paying, invoicing and tax documents that all folks and businesses have.

I would be remiss in this paper discussion if I didn’t include my treasured tape calculator and the pretty ribbons of curled paper that it produces. This handy calculator has assisted me over the years, both on and off the farm, in navigating the murky waters of tax preparation, government paperwork, and dozens of non-profit funding proposals and reports. There is a direct correlation to the length of my calculator tape and the amount of midnight oil I have burned.

Our personal papers add to the fray, and the fact that I’m kind of nerdy doesn’t help my cause. We have a lot of books in our house, including reference books, children’s books and the odd piece of fiction. We also subscribe to many newspapers and agricultural publications and my beloved Rangeland magazine. The very newspaper in which you are reading this column enables the paper pervading my life. And all of these previously mentioned papers combined can only amount to a mere fraction when compared with the depth and breadth of children’s drawings that have accumulated in our home.

Not all of our ranch work involves paper I will admit, and society’s quest to become ‘paperless’ has had an impact. We use our ranch web-site, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube accounts to connect with potential customers and consumers, and if I can pay a bill on-line, I certainly will do that instead of sending a cheque away in the mail.  But time and again, I’ve learned from many wise people that a tiny piece of paper hoarded away can come to the rescue and confirm a detail or prove a fact. Paper does indeed have a place.

I’m not sure I’ll see a reduction in paperwork in my near future, either in work or in play. Perhaps it would be wise to put pen to paper once again, and plan out where to plant a few pretty trees so I can do the right thing and replace all the ones I’ve killed.

Categories
Beef & Business Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

Reality TV

I must confess, we’ve recently started watching a lot more television in our household. This television watching has coincided directly with the start of calving season and there is one very specific show that we all take great interest in. This show has no commercials. It always features something interesting to watch. It’s (mostly) family friendly and the content sparks a lot of questions from our small fry.

We installed calving cameras.

Sometimes known as cow-cams, these wireless security cameras mounted in our pen and barn transmit live video footage of our calving critters to our TV in the house.  We started talking about purchasing cameras last year, and after pricing a few systems out and finding the right deal, a cumbersome parcel was delivered to our post office just in time for our main cow herd to start experiencing the first pains of labour.

I know excessive television watching isn’t meant to be good for us, but I’m pretty sure excessive cow-checking isn’t so healthy either. Cows don’t like to be interrupted by well-meaning pen-checkers as they’re getting down to business birthing babies. Somewhat like humans, I suspect they don’t want a lot of onlookers.  Most humans, of course, wouldn’t welcome a live-feed video of their birth, however when it comes to cows, I figure what they don’t know won’t hurt them. Besides, it’s a nice technological counterpart to the view I have from my kitchen window of cows having calves.

It is really interesting to watch cows who don’t know that they’re being watched. Even during other times of the year when I’m peeping on them out in the pasture from a quarter mile away with my binoculars, they’re still aware that I’m there watching them. Their prey mentality makes it kind of hard to sneak up on a cow and pull a fast one on her. This makes the cow-cams a bit more fun and we’ve made a few interesting observations. If you catch a cow or heifer in the process of calving, you better not blink because you’ll miss it. The whole process is quick. It’s also really fun to watch baby calves get up just moments after being born. Of course, you can see this in person too, but again, cows are distracted by a person’s presence and they act much differently than when they are left completely alone. I was pretty sure that our calves were quick to get up and nurse, but now that I can watch them in action from the comfort of my home, I’ve been quite surprised at just how quick they are to get up and at ‘em.

We’ve always had a policy of no television in our bedrooms, however because of the orientation of our barn to our house, the closest and most logical room to set up the television is in – you guessed it – our bedroom. When you add a couple TV monitors, a few wires, antennae, and three interested children into the smallest room in our home, it gets a bit crowded, not to mention it becomes an Interior Decorating Don’t. Fortunately the gadgets are temporary and my decorating skills are already pretty inadequate so the effects are minimal. Another beneficial side-effect has been my motivation to keep our room very clean in the event that my Other Half drags some interested person into our room to show them how crisp and clear the video is.

There have been other less obvious benefits to the cow-cam as well. One camera pans 360 degrees, providing a great shot of the entire barnyard, including our horses and our diabolical mule, Dexter. It definitely doesn’t hurt to be able to continuously monitor Dexter via video surveillance especially when his mischief often peaks at this time of year. It can be also useful for me to keep tabs on my Other Half, generally creeping on him at random intervals…. I mean “making sure he’s safe.”

Overall, I’d say we’ve gotten our money’s worth out of the cameras. When we all gather around the television to watch whether High Society, Buttercup or Sabrina are about to go into labour, I realize we’ve found our ultimate reality TV show.

Please pass the popcorn.

Dexter caught on camera.
Dexter caught on camera.
Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Change is in the Air

Lately, I’ve found myself with a spring in my step, driving with the windows down and the radio up, and as the song says, letting the wind blow through my hair. The creek is running, the kids are happily making mud-pies and I keep expecting a meadowlark to belt out a tune at any moment.

It’s January.

Call me crazy, but something doesn’t seem right about this. Don’t get me wrong, I’m certainly not complaining about the warmer weather. I hate the snow and cold and bitter winds of winter as much as the next guy, but there has been something a bit unsettling about all of these record-setting warm temperatures. I can’t help but wonder if Mother Nature will issue some type of attitude adjustment in the future and apparently payback is a …. er, payback can be unkind.

One year ago, North America was embroiled in one Polar Vortex after another and I was incorporating long underwear into my wardrobe on a daily basis. Winter clothing was layered on carefully to protect against wind chill and frostbite and the kids could only be released from the confines of the house for the briefest period during the warmest part of the day. The last few years have shown that it’s been slightly hard to predict what will happen next weather-wise.

When I was a kid, it was cold and snowy in the winter time, and hot and (usually) dry in the summer, end of story. There were some severe droughts thrown in there, plus a couple brown Christmases. I remember one winter where I missed a lot of school due to too much snow, but overall, the weather was as to be expected. Fast forward to today and it seems there can be severe flooding in one part of the province, drought in another, summer in winter, and snow in summer.

Climate change is in the news almost daily. I can’t even pretend that I know a lot about climate and weather, but I know that they are not the same thing. Weather is a measure of conditions in the short term, whereas climate is the long-term average of weather. Some folks seem on the fence about whether climate change is a “thing” at all, but I think most would have to admit that at least in the short-term, there have been some extreme weather events. As we have more extreme weather events taking place over a longer period of time, these variations are going to impact our average long-term weather patterns.

As Canadians, we are a nation obsessed with weather. We joke about how there are just two seasons, Winter and Not Winter (or alternatively, Winter and Bug Season) and we can probably hum the tune of all five versions of the Weather Network soundtrack. Weather is important, it affects what we do, how we feel, and in the case of farmers and ranchers, it has a direct impact on our ability to do business.

When Mother Nature deals us a bizarre hand of topsy turvy weather, there isn’t a thing we can do about it. Hopefully we can adapt and be prepared for every situation, but that isn’t always possible. Usually if we are patient enough to wait ten minutes, the weather will change again, but not always. With all the uncertainty regarding weather, we can take comfort knowing that there is one thing that will always remain constant — the wind will keep blowing.

Categories
Critters & Kids House & Homestead Ranch & Real Life

Working Hard or Hardly Working?

We are in the throes of winter. The wind may be howling, the snow might be flying, and it could be forty below outside, but in my house, particularly in my basement, the conditions are just right for baling.

My basement is currently home to many tiny toy tractors, panels, implements, trucks and trailers, all different species of livestock, a small barn, and of course, a baler and numerous bales. The floor is a veritable minefield of equipment and infrastructure that is required to make one’s farm run just right, all at 1/32 of the original size. If our wee farmers don’t have exactly what is needed to get their important work done, they do what regular farm folk do — they improvise. Although their creative inventions usually involve pieces of cardboard, bread ties, old spaghetti boxes and things that are better placed in a trash bin.

Our three small fry spend hours organizing their farms, sometimes working in collaboration, and sometimes working very much alone. Art indeed imitates life, and their pint-sized farming activities tend to be similar to what we are doing in real life. When we are busy picking bales, they too are carefully loading and hauling their wooden blocks and plastic bales out of their fields where they are scattered in a uniform layer. When we are installing a cattle guard, their Lego pieces are working overtime, modified and set up to replicate fences and a crossing with just the proper slope on it. At this time of year, as we put our efforts towards our bull sale, the kids too set up a ring and an auction block and sell the bulls one at a time. I’ve even come across a small farm dog riding in the back of the old farm truck, parked by their tiny corral.

Our real ranch is home to a beloved old feed truck we call ‘Bernadette’ and interestingly enough, the children’s outfit also has a feed truck, one that they have named ‘Vernadette.’ I’m curious to see if ‘Vernadette’ burns as much oil as her real life example, but I’m kind of scared to ask. And I definitely don’t want to invite any trouble by having them consider how they could top up the fluids in their miniature machinery.

It has been very entertaining to watch their farm work/play evolve. Early on, the kids received a farm set that featured a rather mournful looking little bull with horns. Within a day or two, one of the boys performed his due diligence and snapped the horns off, thereby dehorning him before he accepted this new critter into his herd. It didn’t do much to improve the bull’s looks, but at least he wouldn’t be responsible for discounted carcasses due to bruising. A recent toy addition, a roping steer, sustained an unplanned horn (and ear) injury. Ironically, the kids wanted me to glue the horn back on.

The children’s work has grown to include pre-planning stages, and they now draft corral plans on paper before setting them up downstairs. A month ago, I had a huge stack of such drawings and everyone who dropped by our house received a complimentary set of corral blueprints whether they wanted them or not. The kids are quick to remember the PR and marketing aspects of their farms as well, and they now draw small signs to set up at the entrance to their ranches and bits of paper they tape to their trailers.

The kids are able to modify their miniature corrals on a whim, adding and subtracting pens as they need them, and moving Lego stock water-bowls here and there. I wish it were that easy in real life. It’s a good thing that their set-ups are as flexible as they are though, because every so often a tornado that is Little Sister touches down and causes destruction on their carefully organized enterprises.

There’s the saying “if you love your job, you’ll never work a day in your life.” No matter what path they choose as individuals in life, I hope they enjoy their work as much as they do right now.

IMG_4362

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Ranch & Real Life

Three Things

Every Christmas, I send out a Christmas card with a picture or two of our family and some little phrase of well wishes. This year I set up a tripod, wrangled everyone (big and small) into some presentable looking clothing, and somehow got all five of us in the same frame when the timer went and the camera snapped. Four out of five of us even look somewhat decent. The photo on the back side of the card is more realistic, showing three grungy, mud-spattered children looking far less presentable, but wearing big grins after a spontaneous session of puddle-jumping.

The message says “Merry Christmas” and at the bottom I included three things: “Give thanks. Have faith. Love.”

It was a very tough fall around our place with my dad passing away earlier in September. We’ve experienced many peaks and valleys in the last few short months. Along the trail I’ve made some observations and learned a few things that all boil down to those three statements I wrote at the bottom of our card.

Give thanks. This year, we’ve been blessed to receive so much kindness from friends and family and it has been expressed it in so many different ways. Kindness showed up on my table in the form of a ready-made meal for my family, just when I was wondering what we were going to eat. Kindness was someone stepping in at the last minute to cover my responsibilities when I couldn’t cover them myself. Kindness has been a friend or neighbour who stopped me on the baler or stopped me on the street or stopped me at the grocery store to offer their condolences. Perhaps most striking of all is the kindness of perfect strangers. Someone who went out of their way to make our lives a little bit easier, someone who remembered us from one day to the next in a strange and unfamiliar environment, or the entire family of strangers who offered us prayers, Kleenex, comfort and even a place to stay if we needed when we were far from home. We are thankful to have wonderful people in our lives.

Have faith. We are never alone, even though sometimes it feels like we are. There were so many times this year when I needed my faith restored….and it was. Sometimes the message was loud and clear, other times something subtle would happen, almost like a coincidence, and I wouldn’t take too much note of it until afterwards, when I realized it was another piece of the puzzle. All along the trail this fall, there were many small reminders in different aspects of my life that would pop up in different ways, on different occasions, reminding me that when we are tested, sometimes the best response we can have is to just have faith.

Love. Christmas is a great excuse to bring people together from far and wide, cram them into a small space, add food and drinks, and sit back and see what transpires. It can be chaotic. It can be wonderful. Whatever the minute-by-minute feelings are that we are experiencing, remember that love is what brings everyone together. Life is precious and quick and we don’t know what will happen next. The best thing we can do is show our loved ones that we care.

It will be very different this holiday season. Dad won’t be there to light a fire in the fireplace on Christmas day, making the house so unbearably hot that we have to seek refuge on the deck. He won’t be tunelessly humming ‘Rocking Around the Christmas Tree’ while we play Chinese checkers. There will be no fire extinguishers, or saw horses, or winter survival vehicle kits, or any other practical (ie. tax-deductible) Christmas gifts wrapped dad-style under the tree. It’s not the gifts we will miss but his presence. But we’ll share memories, and maybe even a laugh or two. Like it or not, we’ll have to create some new traditions.

Merry Christmas. Give thanks. Have faith. Love.

In the end, isn’t that all that really matters?

Categories
Beef & Business Critters & Kids Pastures & Prairie Ranch & Real Life

East or West

They say everyone deserves a day off now and again, a holiday or a getaway of sorts, to help rejuvenate and renew your soul, inspire your work, even make your work more productive and valuable upon your return. It’s a great theory, but one that’s not always easy to put into practise.

People these days seem pretty busy. There’s a never-ending to-do list of regular tasks plus a whole host of other jobs that get added onto your plate depending on the season. This makes it hard to take time for that coveted vacation. If you have small or medium or even large children, the thought of going on a relaxing vacation where you can put your feet up is almost laughable, especially for some members of the family (*cough* moms). There’s packing and laundry and lists and cleaning and vehicle organization and activity planning that can sometimes (always?) get in the way of having a worry-free holiday. Then when you arrive home, the real fun begins: unpacking, more laundry, vehicle clean-out, more laundry, recovery of lost items, and… more laundry.

Late in the summer, it didn’t look like we were going to get away for a weekend trip anytime soon and that didn’t sit well with me. I’m very familiar with the concept of the ‘staycation’ or ‘holistay’ or whatever the trendy term is these days for having a vacation in your own backyard, so that’s what we did. Except when you’re a rancher, you have a pretty big backyard, and instead of sticking in our literal yard, we ventured down to camp in one of our pastures. It turned out to be a pretty good arrangement. I was happy because I only had to pack whatever was needed for a 12 hour camp out (which is still a lot, but less than what it could have been!), the Other Half was happy because the destination was close and involved cattle, and the kids were happy because when you’re little and you go somewhere, it’s always a fun and exciting adventure. We explored, ate snacks, watched shooting stars and even entertained some good friends who managed to find our campsite in the dark.

More recently, we went on a larger-scale family trip that again incorporated work, play and cattle, something we seem to be adept with here at the Lonesome Dove Ranch. Our family shows cattle annually at Agribition, and after the kids and I sat out for much of this show and others over the last couple of years, we decided it was time to bring everyone. Ten days, three kids, one hotel room, lots of cattle in two different barns, thirty changes of clothes for the children alone… My overarching goal was survival and I’m pleased to say that we achieved that deliverable. Additional benefits included meeting new people, visiting with friends, family and customers, and as an added bonus, we did well in the show too. Some of our kids really cottoned onto the promotion and marketing aspect of showing cattle, some had fun combing, some felt we walked a bit too far, and one child thought one of the black bulls would look better with a pink barrette in his hair. With a little help from friends and family, we had a very memorable time at Agribition this year, albeit a much different experience than what I remember having in the past.

Our family enjoyed two very different holidays this year in spite of a challenging fall for us. Whether you go far or stay near, whether you leave the ranch or whether you take the ranch with you, embarking on a getaway is important and valuable. They say you will return home from a vacation with a more positive outlook on life, be healthier and feel more connected to your family. They also say that ‘east or west, home is best.’ The hardest part of a vacation may be to leave. The best part of your holiday may be your return. Except for maybe the laundry.

Categories
House & Homestead Ranch & Real Life

Home Sweet Home 2.0

In a column I wrote earlier this fall I started to share a little compare-and-contrast exercise of some of my house renovating observations from a decade ago. Shortly after landing our house in the middle of a pasture in 2004, I had sent a newsy email aptly titled “The Top 10 Reasons to Move a House into the Middle of a Pasture” to some friends and family members. One recipient saved it and sent it back to me. There are still a few disconcerting points worth sharing so here are more “Top 10 Reasons” of yesteryear with my present-day update.

2004: You can become one with nature. I actually watched a coyote roam through the front yard. And when asked where all the feathers in the house came from, Other Half replied “Oh, that’s from when I caught the bird that was in the house.” Of course, how obvious.

2014: Fortunately, our inner sanctum has remained free of wildlife, avian or otherwise. The outdoors, however, is teeming with critters. During the summertime gophers, hunted by badgers, hawks, owls, and the odd weasel share our yard. Coyotes continue to amble up to the house, killdeers spend the summer vocally worrying about our presence, and barn swallows swoop at my head whenever I enter or leave my home. During the wintertime rabbits dart through the trees and the odd deer tries to find a quiet nook in our yard in which to relax. There aren’t many things about our yard that exude peace and quiet, so to any prospective deer interested in coming here to chill out, I say good luck with that. Naturally, our domestic critters often trod a thoroughfare through my space as well, and that probably won’t change.

2004: You can shock everyone with the crazy colours you’re painting your house… that’s right, we’re painting rooms NOT WHITE.

2014: Clearly, the whippersnapper who wrote that last point had a pretty youthful (ie. naïve) colour palette which has fortunately mellowed….it had to, there was no other direction for it to go. A bright yellow laundry room, a kitchen coated in fresh apple (okay, neon) green, and a living room that turned out much more peach-coloured than I would like to admit… I’ve traded all of the colours in, not for white mind you, but much more foregiving tones. Neutral colours receive bonus marks for their ability to camouflage mud, sticky-hand residue and manure.

2004: You get a new perspective on things. I mean, come on, is a candy pink bathtub really that bad?

2014: It was. While I’m sure it was very stylish in 1961, the cotton candy-coloured bath tub and associated fixtures were some of the first items to be removed from our house. Not having the proper tools to actually remove the tub, I believe a potato fork among other things, was called into service during the destruction phase. I clearly remember tossing that old tub into the bucket of the tractor and watching it ride off into the sunset. We replaced it with a new shiny white tub. Oddly enough, my inexperienced self didn’t consider white as a good colour for walls yet it was (fortunately) my preferred choice for bathroom fixtures.

Our little house on the prairie continues to evolve and change to suit our needs. We’ve updated windows and siding and added a front and back deck, and as per an earlier column, we recently had our kitchen renovated. Although our house hasn’t grown from its original dimensions, the number of occupants has grown by a factor of 2.5 which means the mess has increased exponentially. But other things that have increased include the hugs and kisses. And the bathroom line-ups. And the cuddles. And the uniform distribution of toys scattered across the entire floor. And the giggles…I could go on and on but I think you get my drift.

Ten years later our house is a home.

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Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

Remember to Remember

It is more important than ever for Canadians of all ages to pause during Remembrance Day and reflect and respect the men and women who have served and continue to serve Canada during war, conflict and peace. Older generations likely remember all too well their wartime experiences, or at least stories about the uncertainty and fear that gripped communities. In today’s media-driven world, news of fallen soldiers, including the shootings that recently took place on Canadian soil, travels so quickly. War, deployment, and casualties are broadcast far more quickly than ever before, yet most young Canadians have no comprehension of the toll that war can take on countries and entire continents. I hope they never will. Yet all of the memories and stories, remembrances, must trickle down.

My interests in observing Remembrance Day were shaped by my small-town school, which I attended for thirteen years straight. Every year the school, community and Legion would come together to put on a beautiful Remembrance Day ceremony. Before the service, teachers would walk from classroom to classroom ensuring that all kids had (and were wearing) a poppy, buying new ones for students if necessary. Whether you were a youngster in Kindergarten or a teenager graduating high school, we all played some role. In the choir, we’d belt out Blowin’ in the Wind, or John Lennon’s Imagine, or the White Cliffs of Dover, for the crowd’s enjoyment. Our renditions may not have been especially tuneful, but they were earnest. Our teachers fostered our interest with poster and poetry contests, and we could enter a Remembrance Day essay as well. If you were lucky enough to win, you received an envelope with your prize winnings of $5 or $10, money which was no doubt donated. We would solemnly listen to the Last Post, wait to see which grade 12 student would read In Flanders Field and reverently watch the local war vets march into the school gym. Some of my classmates had grandparents who were veterans and we would pay especially close attention to them as they walked by. During the moment of silence, we were so quiet you could hear a pin drop.

Since becoming a Grown Up, I haven’t actively participated in Remembrance Day activities the way I did when I was a student. With my children, however, I have an opportunity to get involved again. This year I doled out poppies to my kids and attempted to explain their significance in an age-appropriate manner. The smaller fry have inadvertently referred to their poppies as ‘copies,’ ‘peppers,’ and ‘pokies’ and I’ve picked poppies off of floor mats, out of the inside of boots, off the ground, and out of children’s hands, when they were ironically being wielded as tiny swords. I can’t keep three poppies on three children yet I recall my teachers ensuring a hundred students, give or take, were properly wearing poppies.

Our children are perhaps too young to fully understand the meaning of Remembrance Day and war and loss, yet they are old enough to learn that we live in the greatest country in the world. The daily freedoms and rights that we as Canadians all enjoy, young and old, are not experienced by people in other countries.

I recently learned that not every province in Canada observes Remembrance Day, including some fairly populous provinces, which I found surprising. It’s a good reminder, however, that it is our personal duty to honour Remembrance Day, no matter what we are doing. If you’re sorting cows in a corral, if you’re wiping runny noses, if you are relaxing on a day off work, or simply going about your regular activities, remember. Remember how privileged we are to live in Canada. Remember the people who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. Remember the soldiers, veterans and families who paved the way for our freedom at their own expense. Remember to remember.

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Pastures & Prairie Ranch & Real Life

These Boots are Made for Walking

Ten years ago this summer I made a dear friend. We were hired as summer students, to hike around some of the most beautiful parts of southwest Saskatchewan and identify plants, measure shrubs, and assess habitat for a particular species at risk (SAR). This gal and I spent four months working and living together, and also depending on one another for field safety. It was fortuitous that we became friends, but I think we balanced each other out well. She taught me everything I didn’t even know I didn’t know about native prairie plants, and I brought a sensitivity towards landowner rights to our dynamic (deranged?) duo. At the beginning of summer, we were handed topography maps, a GPS unit, and the keys to one dilapidated quad to share between the two of us with instructions not to ride double (wink, wink).

Some landowners allowed us to access sites with our unreliable quad, while others restricted us to foot traffic only, which we respected. Some days were literally a walk in the Park, and we would lace up our boots and hike upwards of 25 km. We encountered rattlesnakes, black widow spiders, greater shorthorned lizards, numerous bovines, the occasional tourist, an eastern yellow-bellied racer, and many other birds, mammals and SAR, small and large. We came across the humble remains of many abandoned homesteads and tipi rings, we befriended landowners, we waded across the Frenchman, we planted a geranium in a mysterious toilet present on our deck, and we stayed out of the flat when it rained 1mm or more. We had a blast.

One day, we were heading to a location that we were allowed to access by quad, provided we kept our route short and sweet. We parked our truck at a central spot, unloaded the quad and drove down the pasture trail towards our site which was about 8 kilometres away. Just before we arrived, we encountered a low spot that was semi-full of water. We paused briefly before confidently proceeding through this watery depression, only to find that our quad, when weighted down with field supplies and summer students, didn’t have the stamina to make it through to the other side. It glugged, sputtered, and stopped. We pushed and pulled, swore and kicked, but it was no use, that quad would not budge. Resigned, we set off on the brisk walk back to the truck, accepting the fact that we weren’t going to get too many assessments completed on that beautiful summer afternoon.

Hot, dusty, and somewhat disappointed with our day, we arrived back to the truck in about two hours. I hopped in the driver’s seat and declared to my friend, ‘I’ll have the keys.’ ‘You already have them,’ was her response. We looked at each other in horror. Neither of us had the keys. They were clipped to the quad keys. Which were still in the ignition of the quad. That was stuck in an ephemeral riparian area. Eight kilometres away. Our fatigue and frustration made the lines between laughter and tears rather blurry, and by this point in our day’s adventures, we found the situation a bit hysterical. The facts that our keyless truck was still parked several kilometres away from the nearest landline and that cell service was negligible didn’t help our state of mind.

While we hatched a plan for our next course of action, we heard a distant buzzing that gradually got louder and louder. Before long, we had made a rare sighting of a cowboy riding a quad, one that seemed to operate better, or at least faster, than ours. It turned out this fellow was loaded with posts to fix some fence and was headed right towards us. He cheerfully offered us a ride back to our collection of keys sunk out on the prairie, and towed out our quad to boot.

We didn’t have too much to show for that day’s work other than some life experience and a sincere appreciation for helpful cowboys who show up in the right place at the right time. We were tired when we arrived back to town, but we laced up our boots for one last walk: down the street for a welldeserved brew.

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Critters & Kids Pastures & Prairie Ranch & Real Life

Independence Day

Autumn is a bittersweet time of year. It’s wonderful to see the crops being harvested and watch the leaves change colour, but it also wistfully signals that summer is gone once again and we’re on the cusp of my not-so-favorite season.

Autumn is also incredibly busy. There are bales to haul in, cattle to move, pens to set up, cows to pregcheck, and calves to wean and market. Weaning is my favorite ranch activity, followed pretty closely with calving. It’s gratifying to see the calves come in, weigh them up, administer their vaccinations and basically see the fruits of our (and their mamas’) labours. The data we collect is a measuring stick we can use to see if we’re on the right track with our breeding and grazing plans or if we need to make some adjustments. Weaning is also the most stressful period in a calf’s life, so they need extra monitoring following their newfound independence.

Some cows appear relieved to see their babies go, and they’ll wander off over the hills to graze in peace. Other mamas, usually the older herd matriarchs, are a little less eager to be sorted off, always staying at the back of the herd when we’re gathering. I’m not going to argue the intelligence of cows (or some would say, lack of), but when we start gathering a field, I know many of those mamas understand the emancipation that lies ahead.

Usually weaning is a family-friendly event, and this year we had multiple generations of hands on deck. Our three littlest helpers came with and alternated between staying out of the way, getting in the way, eating snacks, napping, and playing with sticks, rocks, ladybugs, and other treasures they came across. Then one day, my Other Half saddled up a couple of extra horses and our four-year-olds got to really ‘help,’ much to their delight.

It was a chilly, windy morning but they were determined to gather pairs out of our roughest pasture. They rode into the coulee and never once looked back. They didn’t go real fast, and I suspect Grandpa rode several extra miles to cover some ground that the boys didn’t, but I don’t think anyone minded. When the cattle came through the gate, I asked if they wanted off, and they replied no. A little ways into the next pasture, once again I asked if they wanted to ride in the warm and cozy truck with me.

“We don’t need you, mama,” my one kid cheerfully hollered over his shoulder at me as he kept riding away through the tall porcupine grass.

Oooph. I’d never been physically punched in the gut, but I think I felt the metaphorical equivalent at that moment. “Okay then, I’ll just keep following with the truck and trailer,” I called back. Had I not been travelling with a co-pilot, I probably would have wept softly into my coffee cup and felt sorry for myself, but there was no time for tears.

My boys’ independence and determination doesn’t surprise me. My Other Half is, ahem, rather strongwilled, and I too am stubborn and have a hard time asking for help. But their response did point to a slow and steady shift I’ve been noticing in the last few months. Our boys are growing up, and with that, they lean on me less and less. Intrinsically, I know that it’s a good thing. They’re making decisions and acting with conviction, but it still smarts a bit.

Eventually, the boys came back to the truck and dismounted, somewhat regretfully. “You got anything to eat, mom?” asked one. “I need a Kleenex,” said the other. “Of course,” I replied, and got them what they needed, relieved that I wasn’t completely irrelevant in their independent pre-school lives. Phew. That was a close one.

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House & Homestead

Home Sweet Home Part 1

This fall marks ten years since my Other Half and I moved a house onto our humble homestead. We had decided to reclaim a previously abandoned yard, mostly to make use of the large beautiful hip-roof barn that was located there. While the yard had a great barn, it didn’t have much else, so we had to figure out what exactly we were going to live in. After looking for a while, we came across a nice little house and we arbitrarily chose a spot to… plunk it. So began our adventure as home owners. Sometimes it feels as though we’ve been here for 100 years, other days it seems as though we just arrived. Either way, our homestead has been (and will continue to be) a real work in progress.

In 2004 the internet was in its young adulthood, and it was before the days of Facebook. That didn’t stop my from subjecting close friends and family to a little email update on our house renovating adventures, which I had forgotten about until a friend recently unearthed a copy of it. Somehow, in the midst of fourth year finals, wedding plans and job hunting, I still had time to pound out a rather wordy and melodramatic message titled “The Top 10 Reasons to Move a House into the Middle of a Pasture.”

It’s been interesting to compare my earlier observations with where we’re at today. Not all of my “top 10” are still relevant, so I’ve picked out a few of my favorite ones to share.

2004: You get to develop the useful skill of filling holes in walls.

2014: Still true. I’m actually not terrible at spackling, and through a lifetime of experience, my Other Half is also pretty good at filling gaping holes in drywall. And, given the fact that there are now three preschoolers integrated into our home, and said preschoolers will someday grow into rambunctious teenagers, I really should just buy some stocks in a drywall mud company right now and be done with it.

2004: You get to check your cows without leaving your kitchen window, sometimes they even rub on your house!

2014: fortunately we have a slightly more defined and refined buffer between our livestock and our house. Sometimes. When we first moved here, we had no fence restricting cattle from accessing our house. And sure, sometimes I’d come home from work and Brownie would have tipped over the BBQ (perhaps in protest?) or wrecked the front step or Tina would have rubbed another piece of X90 siding off the house, but Rome wasn’t built in a day. When we did get the much coveted four-wire fence constructed, we curved it around the front of the house so we can still check cows from the kitchen window. Just the way we like it.

2004: You find a place where you’re always welcome, “where everybody knows your name and they’re always glad you came…” that’s right, the Home Depot.

2014: I don’t darken the doors of big box home improvement stores if I can help it. They don’t know my name, they don’t care what project I’m working on, and the money I spend does nothing to help my local or regional economy. Local stores have competitive prices, unparalleled service and thankfully only give me 10 choices, instead of 4976. Ain’t nobody got time to look at that many samples.

There are still many more points to go, but I’ll have to save those comparisons for another column, perhaps later this fall. Right now, I’d better try and salvage my walls from the bumps and scrapes of life.

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Pastures & Prairie Ranch & Real Life

GPS or GP-No

Technology is a marvelous thing. In the last century, humans have been able to accomplish more, understand things better, and share and transmit information at an almost unfathomable pace. That’s good, right? Right???

I had a tech-savvy co-worker who employed a GPS to navigate his route on trips, apply herbicide to invasive plants, mark out pasture trails and important landmarks. I learned a lot from his methods and through trial and error, I soon learned what a valuable tool the little handheld device could be. A year or two later, my colleague quickly learned that a GPS is only as accurate as the information it receives, and will correctly navigate you to the town you specify…even if the town you specify is incorrect. Typing ‘Carnduff’ into a GPS and expecting it to take you to ‘Carlyle’ is optimistic.

On another occasion, I was headed to a winter work meeting in the beautiful Cypress Hills. I wasn’t travelling with colleagues and had some extra travel time available, so I chose to make use of the two hour “short cut” between our ranch and the park. This route doesn’t take you through any town at all and I didn’t make this choice lightly. I ensured I had a full tank of gas, a fully charged cell phone, winter survival gear, and I actually wore my chore clothes, mainly because I had already gotten in an early morning of pre-work calf-tagging. People at both ends of my departure and arrival locations were aware of my plans and route and I had my trusty grid road map in case my Spidey Senses weren’t tingling.

The trip was beautiful. At -30C, it was chilly and rather desolate, but the sun was bright and the snow crunchy and sparkly, and I was enjoying the trip. After the first 45 miles, I did not meet another soul on the road. Things were going a little too well, in fact I was even running a tad ahead of schedule and anyone who knows me knows that is pretty uncommon. I headed around the correction line and made note of a little coyote trail that veered east that I had taken the previous summer while working with a women’s range workshop. And I quickly did a double take. There, impossibly far down the road allowance completely blown full of snow, was a tiny silver SUV. It was more than a little stuck. Accompanying the immobilized vehicle was a man, clad in a nylon windbreaker and loafers, futilely scraping snow away with an ice scraper.

And so it came to be that I met Dan from Wisconsin. Normally, as in my first example, I would change or omit the name of anyone who may be implicated in a story. In this case, however, I doubt that Dan from Wisconsin is a subscriber, and in case he is, a refresher on winter travel safety probably wouldn’t hurt. Dan had been travelling from Saskatoon to Frontier in his rental vehicle that brisk February day. Dan confidently left all the navigation up to the GPS on his BlackBerry, which deviated in and out of cell service. When Dan finally trudged up to my truck parked a long distance from his puddle-jumper, we exchanged pleasantries and I had a couple of questions I just had to ask.

“What possessed you to drive down this trail packed four feet deep with snow?” I asked. Dan sheepishly replied, “Well, the GPS told me to go this way.” “Didn’t you know you would get stuck?” “The SUV had four-wheel-drive. Plus, I didn’t know how else to get there without following the GPS,” Dan countered.

Friends, GPS navigation can be great, some would even argue it is a time- and marriage-saver. But if a GPS told you to jump off the quintessential bridge, would you do it? No amount of technology can or should ever replace common sense. Had I not happened upon Dan, he would have eventually walked to the nearest farm, or someone else would have found him, but he took a heck of a risk driving through unfamiliar and unrelenting country, relying solely on technology.

Technology is amazing, and takes humankind places we’ve never been before. And that’s the problem.

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Critters & Kids House & Homestead

The Sound of Music

Many people who have known me for the past decade are often surprised to learn that I studied piano for almost half of my life. It’s not really a secret, but it’s not something that would be exactly obvious if you know me in the context of being a mom of preschoolers, a cattle producer, or a rangeland agrologist. Nowadays, I exhibit many Left Brain tendencies like being analytical, orderly and decisive, which doesn’t exactly smack of someone who’s familiar with a light Debussy Arabesque or an expressive Chopin Etude. With my current responsibilities, the creative, free-spirited, and imaginative qualities of my Right Brain often fly under the radar.

As a youngster, I remember seeing a kid playing a violin on Sesame Street and I was hooked. “I can do that!” I thought, although it turned out that violin instructors were rather hard to come by south of Meyronne in the mid-eighties. More practically, my parents responded to my musical aspirations by enrolling me in what I referred to as “fiano” lessons and they bought a beautiful Baldwin piano when I was six years old. I began learning scales, grade repertoire, playing exams, competing in music festival, and studying the (far less enjoyable) theory, harmony and history that went along with the actual “fun stuff.” I learned from the most attentive and patient music teachers, as well as my peers, competitors and adjudicators.

Knowing how to play music is a handy skill to pack around with you. It even sneaks up on you every once in a while, making your ears prick when you hear a vaguely familiar refrain, or a subtle theme repeated, or a flat or sharp make the melody sound just the way it’s meant to be heard. I learned more than just piano, I learned about self-discipline, the importance of hard work, how to perform on stage in front of many sets of eyes, how to be a good sport, how to meet people and make friends, how to make mistakes, and (hopefully) the grace and humility that comes from making mistakes.

I outgrew my first piano and my parents invested in a grand piano, which today happily occupies a chunk of real estate in my living room. It’s a treat to hear friends and family sit down and play a song or two, especially my nieces and nephews. In the absence of guests playing the piano, there are the sticky little hands of my own children at the keyboard, tickling the ivories. Music, not to be confused with noise, is often made in our humble home.

My parents gave me the gift of music and I’m hoping I can do the same with my kids, as my oldest children start music lessons this fall in the same place that I did when I was a little girl. Given that my Other Half also took music lessons as a youngster and to this day is able to play the radio and little else, I’m sort of hoping our kids will fall at least somewhere along the skill continuum between he and I. Perhaps they’ll discover a lifelong love for music….or perhaps they will come away with knowledge of where middle C is and have had a little fun along the way.

In life, you need to exercise both sides of your brain. Ironically, exploring the right side of our brains helps to fuel the development of the left side of our brains. While I know I should make more time to play the piano, there is still music in my ears at all times: the whir of a perfectly humming baler; wind zipping through the wings of pelicans flying just metres above my head; the sound of cattle munching grass on an absolutely still night; three pre-schoolers erupting in a fit of giggles long after they were tucked in bed… There is music all around us, if we just take the time to hear it.

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House & Homestead

Hung Out to Dry

I appreciate everyday modern household conveniences. Things like running water and electricity, and the magic that ensues when they are combined in the form of a washing machine make my life a whole lot simpler. I am happier still that I live on a farmyard with enough water to do the numerous loads of daily wash that come my way. Any time I feel overwhelmed with laundry, I just compare myself to my foremothers who would have loaded up their children (and the dirty laundry they produced) and head down to the creek to beat the stains out on the rocks. Fast forward a few decades and the familiar routine of throwing in dirty items, adding soap, and pressing a couple knobs and buttons doesn’t seem so bad.

When it comes to drying the laundry, however, I’m a little bit Old School. I have a minor obsession with my clothesline. Shortly after moving into our humble home, engineering the perfect clothesline was pretty high on my to-do list. Literally. My husband insisted that any clothesline we installed needed to be high enough to ride a horse freely underneath. Now I’m not certain what past experience or insight he had as to why this was necessary, but it seemed like a critical step to realizing my goal, so I went along with it. We sourced an extra-long piece of metal pipe that we pushed into the ground for one end of the line, and attached the other end directly to the back of the house. Voila! I have a clothesline that the very tallest rider riding the very tallest horse could ride under with much room to spare.

Of course, every clothesline needs a little routine maintenance now and then, which requires some willing bodies who aren’t scared of heights. And a tractor. With a front-end loader. We’ve enlisted help from in-laws, outlaws, neighbours, cowboys and even random passersby, all to keep my beloved clothesline functioning.

There are some definite benefits to hauling alternating loads of wet and dry laundry in and out of one’s house. Nothing beats the fragrance of line-dried laundry or crawling into a bed made up with sheets that smell like the great outdoors. Also, the last time I checked, Saskatchewan is moderately breezy on any given day. This wind is not only plentiful but it’s free and just waiting to suck the moisture out of my clothes. Clotheslines are a great way to pinch pennies, while being quintessentially eco-friendly. Our pioneer ancestors were trendy and didn’t even realize it.

The downside of using a clothesline is that it can be slightly time consuming and, unlike a dryer, you can only leave the dry clothes where they are for so long. Left too long on the line, your clothes might become a popular gathering point for a flock of birds. Left even longer, your dry clothes might get a second rinse from an afternoon storm, require a second washing after getting blown off the line, or get tangled up, requiring your handy front-end loader. The clothes aren’t always soft, especially after those hot, still days, when you can stand your stiff clothing up in the corner after it baked on the line. Also, leaving both your children and your laundry unsupervised for even the briefest period of time may result in chaos. Small, innovative children may retrieve their favourite (damp) clothes, and I once walked in on a discussion that suggested using the clothesline as a zip-line.

So it’s not perfect.

But hanging laundry on the line is still one of the most peaceful things I do in a day. In this busy, crazy, technology-ridden world that we live in, sometimes it’s comforting knowing that I’m doing chores the same way that our mothers, grandmothers and great-grandmothers did. Hopefully they caught a few peaceful moments when they hung the laundry out to dry too.

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Beef & Business

The Customer is Always Right. Right?!

I recently attended a beef production conference where the messages were positive, the information was credible and things pointed towards a good market in the foreseeable future. After years of ranchers sharpening their pencils down into sawdust, it looks like we might be able to go out and invest in a brand new shiny pencil. That way we’ll be ready for the next cycle.

One presentation was different from the rest and focused on a consumer-driven market strategy of a large retail burger chain. The company’s Vice President was there to shed light on their new free-fromadded-hormones market approach. This approach in itself is a whole different story for another time, but my issue with her message was her statement regarding consumer education. Asked about whether the consumers whose opinions this market strategy were based upon had basic knowledge of beef production, her answer was vague. When pushed a bit, she simply said “it’s not my job to educate consumers.”

Wait…what?

Consumers absolutely have a right, maybe even an obligation, to learn about how their food is produced so that they can make informed purchasing decisions. Perhaps at one time, consumers could ask farmers directly for information, or had personal experience themselves which provided a context for where their food came from. Everyone in the entire food value chain — the consumer, the processor, the retail VP, the primary producer – all have a role to play in understanding food production.

Today, consumers are basing their food choices on … the internet? What they see on Facebook? The cost? What their friends are doing? I’m not exactly certain I know what is driving consumer perceptions, but it worries me. In business, the customer is always right, but there is a fine line between responding to legitimate market demands and exploiting consumer innocence.

Recently, a late night comedian created a video of random people being asked about gluten-free (GF) diets. All of the people emphatically confirmed that they lived a GF lifestyle, citing how important it was to them. When their GF-enthusiasm died down, the comedian asked respondents what gluten was. Not one of them could answer. There are people who legitimately cannot eat gluten for serious health reasons and they probably wish like anything that they could. Yet, here was a group of mature adults who were eating a restricted diet without understanding what it was they were restricting or why.

Part of the reason I write this column, or engage with customers and the public on Facebook and Twitter and YouTube (and in person!) is to share day-to-day ranch activities and information about the food we’re producing and eating. Because I’m not just a producer. Like everyone else, I too need to eat in order to survive. I too like to feed my family a safe, balanced and diverse diet to keep them healthy.

Canadians are so very lucky to have a variety of food choices and affordable ones at that. Whether you choose food that is locally produced or imported from another country, organic or conventional, GMObased or vegan, take the time to examine your choice from the field up, starting with the people on the ground who are growing it. If it’s not the consumer’s job to learn about where their food comes from, and it’s not the retail Vice President’s job to educate them, and it’s not my job as a primary producer to do it…. whose job is it?

Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Be Prepared

I’ve developed a personal motto over the years: “don’t plan on anything but be prepared for everything.” I’m not sure if I’ve adopted this slogan because of my experience with raising human and bovine critters, or because I live with my Other Half, or because we carve out a way of life that is at the whim of Mother Nature, but whatever the reason, this motto has served me well. I’m not saying I’m always prepared. On average, I figure I’m halfway prepared 50% of the time, but I try to learn from my past experiences of being ill-prepared and hopefully do better next time.

Nowhere is it more important to be prepared than in your vehicle. Whether you drive a two-door sports car, a van or a beat-up pick-up, the mantra ‘be prepared’ applies. For us, there aren’t too many days when we aren’t on the road heading somewhere, or just tending to the regular chores of hauling cows, trailing cows, or checking cows. I’ve discovered, through experience, that it pays to have certain items stowed away in your vehicle. While everyone should have the obvious safety materials on hand (ie. Water, booster cables, tire iron…) I’ve prepared a list of additional items that have enabled me to maintain my sanity whilst out and about.

1. Fencing pliers. And staples. If you have one, you should probably have the other. Cattle like to stay put 99% of the time, but when they do get out, they wait for the perfect moment when you’re in a hurry, wearing highly inappropriate footwear and have a cab full of groceries and hungry kids. Coming across an errant bovine at just the right time and with the right tools can save you a lot of hassle in the long run. Fencing pliers can be useful in a lot of other situations too, so useful that sometimes my personally labelled set wanders off to help someone else in need and fails to return to my truck.

2. Reading material. For those unexpected minutes (hours) that you end up sitting at the corrals, almost anything can be used for entertaining storybook material. Old dog-eared bull sale catalogs, auction sale flyers, and machinery brochures can be used in a pinch, but there’s nothing like cuddling on a blanket by the bumper of the stock trailer reading a favorite book while you’re waiting.

3. Small piece of rope. Gate too tight to shut? Need a string for your puppy? Want a makeshift halter? Decided it’s finally time to follow through on your threat to strap the kids to the roof? (I’m kidding on that last point). A short chunk of soft rope can get you out of a tight spot, it’s a handy thing to stow away.

4. Diapers & baby wipes. Ever wander the streets of your small town after supper in search of a baby diaper? Uh, me neither. But if I did, and say the little girl who handed me with the muchneeded diaper gave me advice to take an extra one for the truck, I would take that advice. And the diaper. As for baby wipes, they are just handy to have in general, whether you’re a kid or a grown-up. You’ll use them, trust me.

5. Snacks. A very wise mom once told me that you can do anything and go anywhere as long as you have snacks. I find it best to pack what you think you’ll need, then quadruple it. Snacks will buy you a lot of time and ward off unpleasant whining and hunger pangs, however as the snack supply dwindles, be prepared to come up with an alternate plan, fast.

These are just a few things that I have used (or wished I had!) to help make long, short or unexpected journeys a bit more pleasant. As I read through the list, I realize I have to stock up on some items myself. Time to round up that missing pair of pliers.

Categories
Critters & Kids

Who? What? Where?

There is a rumour circulating around the internet right now about the number of questions a four-yearold asks daily. Like most people, I didn’t check the facts but I really liked how the story sounded, so I too shared this rumour, and now I’m taking it one step further and putting it in print. 437. Questions. Daily. That is the apparent number of questions that the average four-year-old asks. I happen to have two four-year-olds in the house, so I’ll let you do the math. I haven’t attempted to tally the number of questions I field in a day, but I suspect that number isn’t entirely out to lunch.

Interested in the plans for the day, I hear: “what are we having for supper? Who is branding today? Where’s dad? Who is branding tomorrow? Can we go there? Who’s gonna be there? Can we go help dad?”

Looking at their surroundings prompts the kids’ enquiring minds and the questions keep coming: “Why do you cut grass? Why can’t the cows eat it? What if we mowed the pasture? Whose truck is that? Do you like this kind of flower? What kind of bird is that? Why does that mama cantaloupe have a baby cantaloupe?” (That last question was actually not referring to melons, but rather antelope, as I later determined.)

If you really want to be subjected to the question-firing squad, throw everyone in a vehicle for a short or long road trip. “Whose corrals are those? Whose bull is that? Whose tractor is that? Whose pasture is this? Why are those cows that colour and not this colour? Is this a community pasture? Do you see the auger over there? What crop is that? How many people are there in the whole world?”

The answers to these types of questions are readily available as we travel around home. Venturing a bit farther away, however, and the questions stay the same, but I don’t always have the answers as to who owns which corrals, and why or where their cows are at the moment. “Why don’t you know, mommy?” is a common refrain from the back seat when we’re four hours from home.

Once in a while, I absent-mindedly answer a question with a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ sparking great excitement and “really? Wow!” I quickly review the subject matter and carefully recant my statement with a precision limited to pre-school parents and litigation lawyers.

Every parent fields their share of questions, and it’s only fair as I’m sure I asked a few in my younger days as well. After all, the best way to learn is to ask questions. When I see how quickly my four year old twins are growing, I’m glad that they still seek answers from me, and are genuinely interested in my responses. Someday I won’t be so lucky, and they might not ask questions at all, and I’ll wish that they would.

For now, I’ll keep answering as best I can, and try to enjoy each of the (437 x 2) daily interrogations. As our four-year-olds grow up, their questioning will plateau, level out and eventually even decrease. It will be a brief respite though. Our older children have taken it upon themselves to thoroughly train our youngest child in the ways of the world and based on early indications, it looks like our small fry will be following quickly in her older brothers’ inquisitive footsteps. Which means I’ll continue to field several hundred questions per day for a few more years to come.

Categories
Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

Dog Gone

I love a story with a happy ending. They are few and far between these days, but whenever I hear one, it kind of restores my faith in the world. I recently came across one such story involving a ranch dog that had ran away but returned a day or two later. It reminded me of our very own Happy Ending story from one year ago.

My Other Half had been riding through some pastures one fine summer day and was many miles from home. He was packing our trusty Border collie dog, Tuck, and at the end of the day, he loaded his horse in the trailer, Tuck in the truck box and started heading back to our ranch. On his way home, he decided to take advantage of his location and stop for a quick visit with some nearby family.

During the visit, clouds had built up and a quick rain shower passed through. Now, most dogs don’t like storms, and at the mere sign of a cloud, Tuck would usually curl up into a small ball and hide in the corner of the truck box, as though that was his canine version of storm preparedness.

After a brief visit, my husband was ready to head back on his way except for one problem… Tuck was missing in action. No need to panic, my Other Half whistled and called and knew that Tuck would obediently return. When this didn’t work, a quick search of the buildings and vehicles ensued, yielding no sign of our loyal dog. An unsettling feeling settled in the pit of my husband’s stomach. After hours of searching, whistling, calling, and checking at the neighbours, there didn’t seem to be any sign of our dog and dark had fallen. Dejected, my Other Half returned home with half of the animal companions he had left with that morning.

Hard-working cowdogs don’t accidentally reach the age of eight years old without being a bit savvy and, shall we say, pasture-smart. Tuck had a good sense of direction and we thought by the next morning, he would be found sitting on the step and wagging his tail in the yard where he had last been seen. I circulated a few photos of Tuck on Facebook and we went to sleep that night worried but hopeful that he would show up in the morning.

Morning came and there was still no sign of Tuck. We followed a few unsuccessful leads from our social media posts, including one that eventually lead to this column, but that’s another story for another day. Everyone was on the look-out, and my husband and boys headed back south for another search. Nothing. By this time, that unsettling feeling of worry was turning into resignation. There is a lot of country between where Tuck was presumed to be and where his home was, and the list of things that could happen was getting pretty long.

My husband had another commitment the next morning, and for many reasons, we had really hoped we would find Tuck before he had to leave. There were a lot of long faces, including those of our three kids and other dog, Kit, when my husband pulled out of the yard and there was still no sign of our dog.

Half an hour after he left, my husband got a call saying that Tuck had been spotted travelling homeward bound in the ditch along the highway. An observant motorist had recognized Tuck’s picture from Facebook, and another friend stopped and persuaded Tuck to get into the back of his truck. Flooded with relief, I threw my pyjama-and-cowboy-boot-clad kids into the vehicle and sped off to retrieve our beloved dog.

Looking a bit worse for wear, he was still the same old Tuck, and he hopped into the back of my pick-up, as if to say “let’s go home.” We’ll never know what he encountered during those two days, but it doesn’t really matter. The sun was shining, the grass was green, and there was a smile on his face as I brought Tuck home. It was a happy ending after all.

Categories
Ranch & Real Life

Like a Rock

Around our place, we pride ourselves upon being thrifty, even bordering on frugal. If you saw our trusty ranch pick-up truck, I think that would be apparent. To get every last penny’s worth out of your old work truck, you can’t be too fussy. If they budge an inch, you better be willing to drive it a kilometer. Or one hundred. Times a thousand. We might not always have the classiest ride, but hey, if it gets us from Point A to Point B, that’s all that really matters, right? Plus every mile we save on our “good” trucks is pretty nice too.

For better or for worse, we favor one particular brand of vehicle on our ranch to get the job done. Generally, this brand performs well under stress, and my only complaint is that at around 350,000 km the doors and end gates can get a little tough to open. So you adapt, roll down the window if you want to enter or exit the motor vehicle, and go about your business. And who really needs an end gat anyway, they can be sort of pesky at times.

Our old ¾ tonne has respectfully achieved retirement status. Once my Other Half’s pride and joy, the ‘98 had lived a full life at its previous owner’s ranch before it even came into our possession. We had eleven good years together. It has chased cows, been roped out of, pounded thousands of posts, and been stuck a time or two. There have been run-ins with deer, gophers, badgers, raccoons, a mule with sharp teeth, and a memorable incident involving a duck and a truck cab full of feathers. The ’98 has functioned as the welding truck, the fuel truck, the maintenance truck and it even had a brief stint as a furniture hauler when it hauled all of my possessions home from university. In the stock trailer. The old single-cab even spent time on the show circuit, hauling cattle to Agribition and Fall Fair for a few years.

In the end, it wasn’t at all unusual to see us pull a “Dukes of Hazzard” move and crawl into the ’98 via the side window. You didn’t do this because you thought you looked cool, but because the door handle was stuck and it was a necessity. There was kind of a trick to starting the old truck and you couldn’t guarantee that it would cooperate just when you needed it to. Ironically, our beloved Chevy started to take its calling seriously and was behaving “like a rock” a bit too literally for our liking.

The time had come for an upgrade. After a very brief shopping trip, we welcomed a new addition to our vehicular family. This new-to-us truck, dubbed the Green Giant, is a real beauty and it features bench seating for six, leather interior, power windows and locks. And a pretty epic tape deck. It was manufactured when I was thirteen.

The children are so excited, especially because the “new” truck yields “prizes” scattered throughout which so far have included a dime, two quarters, a roll of scotch tape, and a crumpled up receipt. I’m so excited because this means I won’t be packing around the portable welder in my truck any longer. And my Other Half is so excited because the price was right and the wheels seem to go around.

There is no telling what adventures The Green Giant will see in the rest of its lifetime but I hope it’s up to the challenge. This new kid on the block has an awful lot to live up to especially since we stepped a bit outside of our brand comfort zone with this purchase. But with claims that this variety of truck isn’t short on “guts” or “glory,” you can be sure that we will put its claim of grabbing “life by the horns” to the test.

Categories
Beef & Business Critters & Kids Ranch & Real Life

The Birth of a Baby

Calving season is a pretty major deal for every ranch. After all, it’s when you welcome the new critters into the world whose existence is responsible for paying your bills eight or nine months later for expenses that you incurred eighteen months before they arrive. It’s complicated, all right, but the bottom line is, healthy live calves will give you much-needed income.

Calving can also be a bit like an emotional roller coaster ride in that there are several ups and downs throughout its course.

Stage One is the most blissful of the stages, one that I refer to as the Anticipation and Wonderment Phase. Cows are brought closer to home for better monitoring. Ranchers place soft, dry straw bedding in the pens just like an expectant (human) mother might prepare a baby bassinette in a nursery. You anxiously await the first arrival, checking the cows a little too frequently, a little too excitedly and maybe a bit impatiently. You’ve been waiting on these babies for a long time and you are soon to see firsthand the fruits of your carefully crafted breeding plan labors. The stars seem to shine brighter on those numerous midnight walks to the barn. You gaze at the Northern Lights once again and feel just a smidgen of pity for the poor urban dwellers who will never know the magic of the midnight bovine midwifery care that you, the rancher, are so blessed to provide.

Enter Stage Two, the phase I like to call Ticking Time Bomb. By this time, you’ve gotten through the first cycle and probably been dealt a few extreme weather events just for good measure as well. You’ve drank several dozen pots of coffee to wake up in the morning, to keep yourself awake during the day, and to get yourself through until the next check, which feels like it should be 3am but in reality, is only 7pm. You’ve dealt with normal everyday events of calving, big and small, and while things are probably going just fine, the smallest thing may cause you to react a bit… er, dramatically.

Stage Three is the Wrap-Up Phase. The weather’s behaving a bit better, you’re sleeping through the night again, and the edge is (thankfully) wearing off. You can reflect a bit on the past couple of months, and rationally acknowledge the good times and a few bad times too. In the end, you realize you made it through to the other side. You get out your breeding field lists to organize who is going where and with what so you can repeat the whole calving process in nine months’ time.

The other day I was going to run some errands and I checked the calving cows on the way. I had Baby Girl in tow and a schedule to keep and here was a cow that decided she should start calving. I didn’t want to run quickly to town and miss it because Murphy’s Law states that’s exactly when something bad would happen. But I didn’t feel like sitting around for the next 30-60 minutes that it might take for her to expel this bovine fetus. Feeling oh-so-sorry for myself, Baby Girl and I drove through the older calves and their moms for a bit to while away some time. A quick check on the cow showed that she was progressing, but still no baby. Also, she was acutely aware of my obstetrical observation efforts, which often slows the entire process down. By now my baby is sleeping peacefully, so all I can do is hurry up and wait, contemplating my super important errands in their current un-ran state. I reclined my seat and tried to relax for a few minutes, because there really wasn’t much else I could do at that point anyway. After a bit, I snuck around to the back of the pen playing a sneaky game of I Spy. What did I spy but a happy, wet, newborn baby calf! And it was beautiful. Watching the mama lick her baby off, murmuring little bovine moos of encouragement to him as he tried to stand just moments after his birth. All of a sudden, I was taken back to the Anticipation and Wonderment stage. Two months and lots of calves later, witnessing the birth of a calf is still kind of amazing. Which is good, because in about 305 days, we’re going to do it all over again.