October 06, 2010 what do ya know

ever since i left brooklyn, and my life got flipped, turned upside down, my sense of awareness has changed in previously unthinkable ways.  farming, which relies heavily on a sense of perception, has given me an appreciation for the tiniest minutiae of every day life.  small, in between moments.  blink moments.  background sounds.  and breaths.  in fact, in this way farming is similar to stock trading.  both require the ability to absorb a swarm of fleeting information which is to be processed through intuition.  respond to without hesitation.  immediate, real time, problem solving.  always trying to be right more than wrong. 

down in georgia, my favorite examples of these moments are those that affirm to me that—yes, holy shit, i’m really farming.  there are obvious signs too, of course.  you know, like when i ride a tractor, have a fridge that looks like this, or walk out onto my deck at home to water hundreds of feet of future delicious organic vegetables.  current status:  be-be.   

but like i said, i find the sweetest moments to be the one’s in between.  when you water the vegetable starts, it produces a sound i’ve never heard before, but now love.  the trays of starts, laying side by side, with holes in their bottoms, get watered for a solid few minutes.  some of the water falls in between the trays, some on the plants.  some pools in the tiny soil cups, some drizzles through.  as the drips drop, and splat into nothing, the sound it makes is the quietest waterfall you’ll ever hear.  a cascade—not of heavy flow—but of drops.  a cascading of pit-pit-pit’s to the ground in the most soothing of displays. 

at that moment, i know i’m farming. 


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October 03, 2010

“all right everybody—look cute—the guy said he’s gonna put this one on the internet for sure.” —bottom piglet


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September 27, 2010

this is some footage i shot of cnn shooting footage of us.  the crew took several hours of footage at both farm burger and at fowler farm, so clearly a lot of action was cut out to make the final product. 

in this clip, farmer j is explaining our use of temporary electric fencing and rotational grazing in the context of how the great wild herds around the world evolved to graze. 

the fences mimic predators—always lurking on the perimeter—and the predators cause the herd to graze in a tight formation. 

this mob grazing has long term and exponentially beneficial effects on the pasture through an even distribution of both grazing and hoof impaction by the herd.  furthermore, the biggest, strongest, swiftest, and smartest of the bunch will avoid the predators most effectively—grazing in the center, and pushing the weak to the edges to their likely respective deaths.  natural selection at work.

in attempts to mimic this system, a good grazier will identify these instincts in his own domestic herd and cull—slaughter, removing from the gene pool—to improve overall herd quality.

nature is our instruction manual.


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September 27, 2010 georgia skies

one second i was stopping to admire all the good last night and today’s rain was accomplishing…

…and the next second, i was drowning in it.  me, the dog, and the cows—us three just got annihilated by the georgia skies.  


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