Blog
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Ambassadors and first ladies
These were my surrogate children at the dairy conference, Matt and Sarah Mann. They are wonderful kids and I told everyone at the conference they belonged to me.
Jake is in shorts and we’re headed to the 60s today! It’s going to be a great day on the Knolltop!!!!The snow is almost all gone and I have to say I’m enjoying the brown mud and slightly green grass. I didn’t even wear my long underwear to the barn this morning, now that’s warm!Let me share a few more photos with you from the Great Lakes Dairy conference.We were serenaded by Junior Michigan Dairy Ambassador, Matt Mann during the social hour on Friday evening. I bet they didn’t know they were getting such a multifaceted package when they picked Matt for an ambassador!And here are two of my favorite people, Richard and Patty Hyde. Of course everyone knows Richard as the MHA President….such a great leader he is! And of course his wonderful, talented and always happy, giggling wife Patty (Robb). She is the older sister of my college roommate, Julie and she may even kill me for putting her picture here on the blog…but I’ll take my chances that she’ll take it all in stride. Hey Patty, that’s the price you pay when you’re the First Lady of the Michigan Holstein Association! -
Amanda Nolz and me
Good Morning from a sunny, soon to be warm Knolltop!It’s been like spring here and I love it. The snow is melting and it smells, looks, feels like April. I know we’re in for more winter, but this is a great reprieve!The Great Lakes Regional Dairy Conference was wonderful as always. I was able to visit with so many and meet so many new friends. One of the friends I was so excited about meeting was Amanda Nolz. Let me tell you, she’s as awesome as you think….she does not disappoint!And one of the other great aspects of the conference was that Matt Mann from Camden was chosen as the Junior Michigan Dairy Ambassador! I was so proud of him! Now he gets to promote dairy across the state for the next year.Okay, I”m late for the barn, so I’d better get going…more later with pictures of Amanda, Matt, Bob Miller, Loralee Schultz and so much more! -
Good Morning young dairy enthusiasts!
Good Morning Gang!
I’m making this post for the youth that are going to be listening to Amanda Nolz at the Great Lakes Regional Dairy Conference. Amanda will be teaching the kids how to create a blog this morning and I highly recommend it. The more positive stories we tell about animal agriculture the better and how much more fun would it be to see youth on the farm posting about their lives and what they do!
If you’re a young person reading this….I’ve got three words for you….NEVER GIVE UP!
And one more shout out to Hayleigh Geurink! You’re an awesome board member of the Michigan Junior Holstein Association!
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Good Morning!
Good Morning from Grand Rapids!
I’m at the Great Lakes REgional Dairy Conference and it’s going well. I’m heading out for breakfast with Matt Mann….he’s in the ambassador contest and no doubt will win because he is the greatest kid….besides my kids…that is~!
Cows are calving at home, but I guess they will be okay…..keep praying for them.
It’s time to go….more later, I hope!
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Family matters
It’s a very cold morning here on the Knolltop.
I’m holding out for the warm weather and yes, rain is predicted! I can’t wait!
JW had to leave early this morning to go on an FFA chapter visit in Springport. As he was backing out of the drive, his truck got stuck in the snow. Luke and I went out and pushed him to freedom and chuckled all the way back to the house. When I walked in I said, “Thank God for family!”
Chores are waiting, it’s cold and the sooner I can get them done, the sooner I can come back in!
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Calves and famous names
It was cold this morning, much colder than it’s been and I guess we’re in for another bout of wind. But then we will get our January thaw…in February. I really don’t care what month it is…as long as it doesn’t wait until June!
Does anyone feel like praying? I have a couple of requests if you’re in the mood. If not, then skip to the next paragraph. I’ll be leaving for the Great Lakes Regional Dairy Conference on Thursday morning and will be gone until Lori from Knolltop Morgans brings me home on Saturday. This will be a nice break for me, but the rest of the family will be home….so I don’t have to tell you how to pray for them. AND, I don’t have the foggiest idea how I’m going to get to Grand Rapids on Thursday morning. I need a ride, but haven’t found one yet. Please pray for that!
We had another heifer calf born yesterday. Her name is Kooper. I know, that’s wierd, but it had to start with a K and that just popped into my head. So her registered name will be Knolltop Roy Kooper…..wasn’t there someone famous with the name Roy Cooper?
Time for chores!
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A little better
It’s kind of a foggy morning here on the Knolltop. The weather has decided to straighten up and give us some warmer temps. I can actually see dirt on the dirt road!
Well, the computer has been acting much better in the past couple of days, we may be on the road to recovery here. Although it was nice to have a week off from being on the computer, I have to say, I’ve missed all of you!
Who was rooting for the Steelers? I wasn’t. I like Kurt Warner so I wanted the Cardinals to win and so did everyone else in our house except Jake. He made himself a megaphone out of paper yesterday afternoon and used it through the whole game.
Sarah put out a spread on the table for us so when we got in from chores we were treated to a superbowl feast! I ate my way across the buffet until I was miserable. And this morning before chores I downed a couple more brownies and some chex mix. I know, I know, I need to get on the treadmill.
I hear the back door opening, time for more chores! Later!
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Still no good.
Well, this computer is still not working properly. I just got the thing back and right in the middle of something important, the thing shuts down due to overheating! This thing had never done this before….now I have to take it back to the computer guy. I’ve had enough!
So, I have no idea how long I will be out this time, but I’ll be back…at some point! I hope!
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Computer not working
I’m here in the computer store working on their display model…my computer is corrupted! So I won’t be posting here for a couple of days….I’m trying to get the guy to get my computer done pronto!
Okay, so see you in a couple of days….
now the guy is asking me about church…gotta go!
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Warm Friday
It’s another balmy morning here on the Knolltop. I love this warm weather!
Because many of you don’t get the Farmshine, the Farmers’ Advance or Farmworld, I think I’ll put my column in today.
But before I do, I just wanted to mention the games last night. While Sarah was selling baked goods at the FFA bake sale, Luke’s team beat Pittsford and JW’s team got beaten. Jake will have his first game tomorrow, he’s so excited!
Okay, here’s my column from this week.
Truth from the Trenches by Melissa Hart
I want to be a farmer.
Waking up to -20 degrees this morning the words coming out of my mouth are not “I want to be a farmer.” Rather, “I don’t want to be a farmer today” is more like it. But after reading an essay written by a six year old little girl in the most recent issue of the Michigan Farm News I can see again why farming is a special way of life.
Addy Battel of Elkton, Michigan wrote about her desire to be a farmer when she grew up. Like many children her love for farming is rooted from watching and helping on her grandparent’s farm. The enjoyment she experiences from helping feed calves and wanting to be outside along with the wonderful smell of maple syrup boiling and the crunch of a fresh sugar beet are all things she mentioned in her essay. But what sealed the deal in her piece was how much she liked the smell of manure in the dairy barn. Now there is a true farm girl!
How many other kids are out there with this kind of desire? How many kids are out there who have been to our farms, helped with our chores and have developed a desire to want to raise livestock or plant crops and watch them grow? How many other kids are out there who have a passion for farming and may never get the chance?
We’ve discussed this before, but the dead of winter may be the best time to ask ourselves, if our kids want to come back to the family farm are we going to stand at the gate and chase them away to look for a more lucrative career or will we open the gate and let them in?
Looking down the road in the dairy industry there seems to be nothing but doom and gloom. Who in their right mind would encourage their children to come home to that? But who in their right mind would discourage a kid from doing what their passionate about? The passion for a career is what will fuel the learning process and will keep the determination on fire to be successful.
While there are millions of people around the world who are suffering from one thing or another, dairy farmers could teach “Suffering 101.” But remember, suffering produces perseverance and perseverance produces character and character results in hope and hope never disappoints us.
If there was ever a career that instills perseverance, character and hope into a person, it’s got to be farming. If our children venture down the farming road then these attributes will also be instilled in them, if they haven’t already been developed by simply being raised on a farm.
I’m not saying that if we want hope, character and perseverance then we need to be a farmer, but I am saying that farming is more than high debt loads, broken equipment, rising inputs and volatile income.
It’s a desire that is infused into some people. It’s a way of life that some will never want to leave. It’s passion that will never wither. It’s a responsibility that we have to take seriously. It’s a privilege that we shouldn’t take for granted. And on a day like today, it’s a testing ground that will use up every bit of grit, determination, tenacity and strength in a man. But it’s also a place where we can be renewed, refreshed and recommitted by the smell of boiling sap, the crunch of a fresh sugar beet or the unique smell of manure.