Tag Archives: farm

fireflies and lightning

over the valley

My buddy Ken invited us out to his family’s farm last night for “boys night out”… (read as leave your wives at home)… Gender bending aside – I was the only one who had spouses who qualified to come to the gathering.

I met Ken during my first and only year of college away from St. Louis at a tiny white-bread liberal arts institution called “Westminster College” in Fulton, Missouri. Hailing from Little Rock, but with the majority of his family being from St. Louis, Ken’s familial worth most would find staggering.

I can only guess that spending his formative years in Arkansas made him replace the silver spoon in his mouth with a corn cob. The guy is completely down to earth and possesses a work ethic and desire,.. no,… scratch that… JOY in getting his hands dirty that you’d never assume that he was a member of one of St. Louis’ old-money dynasties.

He became an unlikely, but cherished friend… and a fun dorm neighbor. He would regularly bang on the wall and tell me to turn down my house music… I would regularly edit his English papers. To this day – Ken credits me for teaching him how to write and how to diagram and identify the major parts of the vagina.

The “farm” consisted of a vast stretch of land with a nearing 200 year-old ancestral cabin which was moved by his family from Kentucky a century ago to it’s present site. You don’t have to be related to feel the history of the place resonate.

cabin interior

The valley below contains pastures and stables for a cousin’s horse collection and a good sized home occupied by the care-taking family who lives on-property. The cabin, which after additions in the early-mid 20th Century, now sleeps 12. It is shared / owned by “all” of the family. Everyone pitches in with a yearly fund and one cousin maintains a website so family members can reserve the cabin without getting into schedule conflicts.

We arrived by 8pm and were greeted by the guys at the pool: Ken’s neighbor, Bob, a bearish, banjo playing 50-something… Rob, computer genius / geek and Ken’s old work colleague and Dan, Ken’s wife’s friend’s boyfriend and aging, tattooed, Gen-X “Extreme Sports” guy.. and us.. the three hairy homos. An odd mix – but it worked.

Dusk was magic. We stood in the pool and watched a thunderstorm rage in the distance while fireflies ignighted the valley below us.

Everyone pooped out by midnight. A stark contrast to the bashes I remember ten years ago when the invariable drunk guests would puke in the woods, girls would loose their bikini tops, couples would have sex on the trampoline and I would find myself talking to Ken’s sister till dawn.

Nonetheless – it was one of those evenings where you pause for a second and notice that you feel so alive that you wonder what the hell is it you feel the rest of the time.

Not blog worthy at all.

lactose tollerant

#2249 says hello

Chad’s mom retired from the Connelsville School District about four years ago. “Not working” for a year drove her PA-mountain folk sensibilities crazy, so she took a part time job at a near by dairy farm taking care of calfs. She feeds them, gives immunizations and assists in birthing the occasional calf.

This morning we got to tour the farm and visit the little mini-moos in her charge. I’ve never been to a dairy farm before. My only exposure to livestock has been limited to the meat counter at the supermarket.

moo

The farm was a series of very large, somewhat weathered buildings connected by gravel drives. The building where they keep the calfs looks like a big greenhouse lined with two rows of square metal pens.

There’s cats…. EVERYWHERE… Apparently they’re good for pest control. At any given time on the tour we’re shadowed by about 6 of them – either curious or looking for a hand out.

The milking room looks like a mix between a set from an Aliens movie and a Jiffy Lube. The lighting is too demure for me to get a good photo but I linger around looking at the complicated matrix of tubes and shiny stainless fixtures. The equipment is loud – and the air feels like New Orleans in July. 

A mischievous glint jumps across mother Grimm’s eyes as she hands us two buckets filled with cartoon-scaled baby bottles…. “Ever feed a calf before?” – she asks, knowing full well that none of us have.

We head to a small circular structure containing six pens. This is where they keep the calfs which have been sold and are awaiting pick-up.

I try to avoid eye contact and busy myself with the camera as Chad and Kevin feed two of the calfs… but my busy-butting is foiled – and before I know it, the camera is snatched from my hands and replaced with TWO bottles.

I can’t help but giggle as these two slobber-machines go at it with such enthusiasm that it’s hard to keep a hold on the bottles. Meanwhile a neighboring calf nudges my side and Chad’s mom laughs from the wide-eyed look on my face.

We finish up our tour and head to a tiny mountain-top diner for lunch where everyone knows everyone – except for the strangers from St. Louis with cow slobber on their jackets.

“Betcha them low-land city-dwellers will write about this in some kind of computer journal!”