This is my Job

Farming these acres is my job.  A job I chose. A job I chose and grew to love. Being a woman farmer is what I am all about. A woman who farms not a farmers wife. I am the farmer.  The grower of food. cows

And I am still a relatively young woman.  In the peak of her working life. This is not my retirement or anything, I am not old enough for that – not by a long shot – this is my job. This is not a hobby or just something to pass the time. This is my job of work. It is a small enterprise on purpose. I like to fly under the radar. My food revolution is spreading by word of mouth. My job has impact.  I feed people.  I invite people to come and experience farming. This is my job. sow

It is not 9 – 5. It is unpaid. I am self employed with horrible pay. But I did not design this work to make money from the outside. That would be another kind of job.  I designed my career to create a self sufficient life, to train myself to live within my means, to feed people all summer long and put some away for the winter.  And to write about it. To create a lifestyle that feeds itself and feeds me and enables me to save a little for travel and clothes and boots (and the hairdresser though she gets paid with eggs as often as not!).  And to document the progression in written and photographic form.  The work and the documenting in this blog are my job. I am amazingly lucky to be able to love my job. Though I did not love it at first.

But is a job that makes no cash a lesser job than well paid work?  Am I of lesser value to society because of the lifestyle I have chosen? Am I still a force to be reckoned with? cows

cows8

cows

I start work at 7.45 every day. This is what time I walk out the door dressed in work pants and a warm top and boots. By then I have had my coffee, done the washing, made the beds, planned the dinner, swept the porch, cleaned the kitchen, hung out the laundry and answered my messages.  Just like any working woman.  By 8am I have arrived at work.  List in hand. And we proceed.

At 12 we have lunch, we go on a break,  then the unpaid workers take time off until 3pm, while I do paperwork and planning and food (which is part of my job), write the lists on the boards  then garden or mow then we reconvene at 3 and work again until 6. Then showers, dinner at 7 and clean-up.  I am a farmer so this is my day. (The hard part is being the farmer and managing a house as well – but many working women struggle with that problem.)

In the evening I do the pictures for my blog, catch up on messages, personal or otherwise. Do housework then later in the evening I rest. meat chickens

This is not an extraordinarily heavy or hard day.  Many, many women have harder days.  I am not over working and I do not need to take it easy.  Maybe when I am 60 or 70  or something I might take it easy but I am a long way from that.  This lifestyle is not something I am doing because I cannot work any longer – this is my job.  If I chose to leave the country and go back to my former life I could get another well paid job very easily.  So I am not farming because I have nothing else to do.  The farming,growing good clean food, hosting/teaching young people, the photography and the text – they are my job. It is intensive for about 10 months of the year and in the other two months I travel and write – travelling is an important part of my learning to farm and live better and this is when I have some downtime. pig

I have chosen this job. It was planned and organised though evolving.  Sometimes I do overtime, but usually it is only a 9 hour day.  And if you factor your job and travel time in I bet most of you work or have worked a 10 hour day too.  I am not elderly neither do I need extra rest. I am still young.  I do not need to take it easy. I am young enough to work all day at full steam with ease because this is my job.  I will not wear myself out. I am fit and healthy. I am peaking physically. I am a woman we peak for a long time.  The animals and plants and earth and pasture and I are a team. We work together.  We are roaring along – not always easily, the lessons are brutal but always we move  forward. I planned it this way.  I love it. I thrive on it. We manage a kind of symmetry, creating a small ecosystem of our own. The animals and gardens and I. I am a part of a whole.  A pivot, true, but part of a balanced whole. The animals and I, and John on the weekends and our resident workers in the summer all contribute to this whole. We are a team. We have our systems and rhythms.

layer chicks

I determine my net worth by how many people I feed a year –  how many meals I grow – how many plates I fill –  how many hot dinners from my fields and gardens, how many salads and plates of scrambled eggs, how many days the animals feed from pasture and food raised on the farm – how many smiles they elicit:   not on how many dollars I feed into the bank.  I feed the people who go out and put dollars in the bank – I am part of their chain – their ecosystem.

Just because it is unpaid on a small farm does not mean that it has lesser value than a paid job off the farm back in Europe. Just because it is unpaid and menial does not mean that I should not work as hard as I can and give value for my presence every day.  Just because it is unpaid and not in the news does not mean that it is not a serious and valuable contribution to the clock workings of the earth. And just because it is unpaid on the Plains of Illinois miles from anywhere with not a soul watching does not mean that I can laze about on a Monday.  Whether I feel poorly or not. On a Sunday afternoon maybe. But Monday is a work day.  Monday to Saturday.  Work Days.  And oh when the sun comes out late in the afternoon then BAM – Miss C is back on board.

There.  Said.  Jumbled. But said.

Hope you have a lovely day.

celi

288 responses to “This is my Job”

  1. Seems like you keep your hours under control. I thought farmers had unlimited hours when I wanted to be a farmer. I appreciate the freedom you enjoy and the others- economically, the meaningful work and the living with nature. Now I’m too ole to start again. But it is happening and the torch has been passed. Here is to long life and growth and prosperity.
    Don’t forget Jesus who made it all possible- from the idea, to the respect for womanhood to alternatives ways of living. He is more meaningful, more satisfying, more holy and more real. I pray y’alls spiritual path leads to HIM.

  2. I kind of envy you, I used to help around a country house that could be considered a very small farm. While I cannot remember ever thinking that I’d just love to be shoveling manure today, there is something about working outside, sweaty and with obvious purpose, that is just nice. And I don’t think it’s that easy to be neurotic if you’re a farmer. I like that you farm. And I like that you blog. Yay!

  3. My mother is a farmer and she pretty much has the same schedule as you apart from the blogging that it. Whenever people ask me what do your parents do I say farming. I can see on their faces how much romanticized this job is and no one is really awake for the hard, never paid enough work.
    Cheers to you!
    T

  4. Reblogged this on christoff2016 and commented:
    i found this interesting because it tought me about living within my own means. it showed me that you do not need a lot of money in life to make you happy. it shoed me that all you need is a few small things that you enjoy to make you happy.

  5. Some of the most important jobs are unpaid, or paid marginally. Mothers. Teachers. Farmers. I grew up on a farm, but after doing a couple of stints on the hay wagon during my teen-age summers, I decided to become an engineer. Now I’m retired, and on our small suburban plot we have garden beds, fruit trees, blueberry bushes, and rabbits. (No, I don’t raise the rabbits, but plenty of them come around anyway.) Your job may have long hours and horrible pay, but you are rich nonetheless. Your post was beautifully said, more poetry than prose. Should be required reading.

  6. Farming… The job that feeds us all.. My small town in Wisconsin is a farming community.. Kids even drive their tractors to school! Please follow ☺️

  7. I really liked this post. I am a freelance cook now but I have dreamed of owning a small farm. I know there will be little profit, but there is something majestic about livestock and a seed turning into food that comes out of the ground

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