| 1/31/10 |
Well, the first month of twenty
ten wasn't too bad, for January in Montana. Except wait, people
in Havre and numerous other burgs might disagree. If they've
thawed out enough to move by now. The weather has been brutal
up there...
But speaking of Havre, it's been
suggested we change the name to Favre, after Brett Favre,
the NFL quarterback. This was proposed (tongue-in-cheek, kinda)
as way to boost the economy, assuming Favre would move to Havre,
and pay taxes there. Except this would ruin the "you can
have 'er" joke, but aside from that sounds like a bully
idea! Long as he doesn't visit in January.
It got kinda cold here a time or two, but Thank God
we don't get much wind here. Except wait, I even reserve the
right to change my opinion about wind. Turns out our old farming
haunts on the Hi-Line are high on the list of proposed wind
energy developments. Like real high.
There's already a significant wind "farm" by Ethridge,
and it appears the next one just might be right up the road
there under the rimrocks, where I spent significant parts of
my life going round and round on a tractor. Well, I did also
spend quite a bit of time exploring, first on horseback and
later mostly by motorcycle. Judging by the number of buffalo
jumps and teepee rings, I wasn't the first one who'd found the
area interesting.
In fact I have little doubt it was better suited to that, than
grain farming. Although, we're even more glad now that my Grandpa
Mink saw potential up there all those years ago, and that my
folks gave it a go. It's not exactly the Garden of Eden, which
brings up a memory that's always made me smile, even moreso
now.
I was just a kid, high-school age probably, & had stopped
in the Derrick bar in Kevin to pick up a Sunday newspaper. The
usual contingent of farmers and oilfield folks were there, and
our neighbor Archie McLean had just read the yield results from
the ag research test plots scattered around the state. As usual,
the ones down by Conrad just completely eclipsed the yields
in our neighborhood, nearly double in a lot of cases. Archie
rattled off a few numbers, and with an ironic grin said "but
for 50 miles we'd all be rich!"
Archie got cancer a few years later and passed away, way too
young. I hope he's grinning up there somewhere now...
We still have the property up there, although
we're farming similarly poor and rocky (if quite scenic) ground
now here in the "Valley of the Flowers".
Destiny or something, I guess...
At least it kinda forces you to explore doing
it different; alternative crops and marketing venues, so maybe
it's good. That was certainly the vibe at the Winter
Farmer's Market here in Bozeman yesterday. The movie Food,
Inc. had shown in the same building, the Emerson
Cultural Center Thursday evening. Turnout was reportedly
outstanding; ~600 people, with a couple hundred staying for
the panel discussion afterward. Alas, Kim and I didn't make
it (although we've seen the movie, and yes, it's horrifying).
Traffic and sales were good yesterday, and it's more than refreshing
to deal with folks who're looking for a different model.
I've said it before, but am becoming more convinced
all the time. Once you start eating healthy, there's no going
back. After a while you can tell, almost instantly whether food
has nutrition in it, or whether it's just "empty"
calories. One of many conversations yesterday was with a guy
who had lost ~180 pounds since he started eating healthy. The
other stuff; there's basically nothing there, and so your body
keeps telling you "feed me!!", and you keep eating.
Healthy food, it doesn't take near as much to satisfy. We've
been buying (or rather, often bartering or trading) a significant
portion of our produce from other vendors at the market. I'm
telling ya... there's no comparison.
And, we just recently finished cutting up our
buffalo, a scrumptious yearling, and oh...! It's off
the scale. Tender, but way more than that, it's just loaded
with nutrition. Real Meat, indeed...

Speaking of which, buffalo skinning and related
labors ate up a significant portion of January, so to speak.
That wound up for the season last weekend, though. It's nice
to catch a "breather", although I am going to kinda
miss the income.

Time to get rolling on cleaning our malt barley
and peddling it to breweries. Plus of course it's bookwork season.
Bookwork and bookings, barley and beer breweries, buffalo skulls
and robes and hmmm... clearly I need to delve further into the
alphabet. Just think of the potential...
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