Joel Salatin was the Keynote speaker this year.[/caption]
Joel Salatin’s keynote was “What does Country Living Contribute”. Wow. What a list of positive offerings that people like us give to the world. While some people consider us midwesterners just “fly over states,” we know that we hold a crucial place in this country.
Truth in Life - In the day and age of Fake Everything, we still know that you can’t fake soil fertility to a tomato plant, and that in order for there to be life, something had to die. Also, the food on our plate will still be valuable even if Wall Street Crashes. I have regularly had the thought that even if everything else falls apart, I have eggs and milk coming from the barn, rainbow chard and cucumbers from the garden, and pork coming from my freezer.
Practicality - We work with and produce, a product you can actually touch. It has to be real. After all, “You don’t grow a tomato with a focus group.”
Personal Development in Life - Farming, homesteading, gardening, even scratch cooking...it all is personal affirmation, your need to be needed. It reminds us that children are an asset, not a liability and that letting them work and do meaningful things that can’t go undone affirms their worth and place as well. There is responsibility taught on the farm, even to the smallest child. If the eggs don’t get collected, there’s no breakfast. If the nesting boxes don’t get cleaned out, the eggs get messy or the chickens go lay elsewhere. We teach that there are natural consequences to our actions when they’re young. There’s also the lesson of acceptance. The tomato plant never bullies you and the cows are always happy to see you.
Simplicity In Life - These days, you can’t even fix your own car anymore, but there’s value in someone holding on to simplicity. You can’t rush the milking. If you try, you end up with the goat stepping in the bucket and spilling the milk. There’s security in being able to fix what’s broken and knowing where everything came from. It can’t be all taken away from you if you can grow more yourself.
Faith to Life - We get fearful when we don’t know where things come from because we don’t have any control or any options if it stops. We, through simple farming and connecting to our food, can give certainty and faith to those in an insecure world.
It is a hard life. Certainly a dirty life. And perhaps even a bit of a threatened life. But after a day spending time with people who “get it” and encourage it, I was reassured in the beauty and rightness of coming home and hugging my goat.
Want to attend the next big event at Lehman's? Check out the event calendar here.
Cold-Packed Sweet Dill Pickles: Canning Without a Pressure Canner or Jar Prep!
Learning to can? Lindsay Lehman Peters shares her family's recipe for easy cold-packed sweet dill pickles.
0 Comments