Why do these barns stand empty,
On this old family farm,
And
when did farming smaller holdings,
Actually do the country harm,
He was happy with his hundred ewes,
Few
horses, hens and sows,
And never really saw the need,
To
milk more than thirty cows,
Most of what they ate, he grew,
As DEFRA looks
to blame,
He didn’t need the plastic tags,
He knew his
stock by name,
But he finds himself retiring,
Because his
joints are stiff with age,
His sons moved to the city,
Where
they pay a proper wage,
So he’s in the hands of agents,
And their
joy is plain to see,
Not a thought about his lifetimes
work,
Just a big fat sellers fee,
They split the farm up into lots,
Such is
their endeavour,
Without the sickening realisation,
Another
farm is lost forever,
When the farmhouse sells at auction,
Should he
really mind?
When it’s bought by the very people,
Who
have robbed his pension blind?
Its sold with tiny paddocks,
Because they’d
like to keep a horse,
But they love the look of foxes,
So
they’ll never hunt, of course,
They won’t like crowing cockerels,
Or the
smell of muck being spread,
The winter sound of gunfire,
Or
the thought of game shot dead,
These barns have stood a century,
Will soon be
filled with glass and steel,
Developers will leave some beams
in,
So it has that country feel,
All the strangers move in slowly,
And all the
country skills are lost,
Do we think just about the value?
But
ignore the long term cost,
He sells the farm and wonders,
What all his
works been for,
And how will these new folks manage,
If
there comes another war,
When Sainsburys shelves are empty,
There’s
no wheat or livestock reared,
They will look for farms and
farmers,
To find that both have disappeared.
- Neil Andrew
One of the unforgivable things about growing food is that you get to play one game a year.
ReplyDeleteWith Minecraft or Sims or Grand Theft Auto whatever is forming this next generation's minds, you can "start over" and try something different every five minutes. Farming? Screw it up in any small detail and you will be hungry for a year.
ERJ, The oldest Nighean Gheal and I were having this discussion this very week on failure and "the younger generation" and the fact that not only do we have the feature of the "restart" as you note here, but the fact that in many ways our society has made "not failing" of primary importance, not its corollary "failing in a way that is a learning experience". It will not serve us well in the future - as you so adroitly point out.
DeleteIt also points to the fact that so many think their "food" comes from the store, not somewhere else.
Mom's family during the Great Depression picked crops for about half the year for money. The other half was spent on a small inherited farm that had been parceled out amongst family members. Each family had a small frame house, but had a common barn, and small pig pen for a few hogs. Each family also had their own chicken coop (they couldn't divide the eggs equally). Each household also had gardens where 'the three sisters' were grown too.
ReplyDeleteHunting was practiced by everybody so game was very scarce. Deer were sightings and rumors, hardly ever brought in. Rabbit was the main animal, both jacks and cottentail.
They didn't have many possessions, but since everyone lived under the same, no one felt underprivileged or poor. Grandma continued growing a small garden until she could no longer do it. It was a lot of work, but peaceful and stress free. Every one had chores and their were n complaints. Everyone who was able helped out.
Thanks for sharing the story.
DeleteIt is odd: for both sets of grandparents, I have no idea what they did during the Depression. My mother's parents had reasonable jobs at a utility company and as a nurse; my father's parent's lived out of state in the Rural South and eventually moved to find a new life. In either case, I am sure it was grim even with a reasonable job. It certainly impacted all of them for the rest of their lives.
Excellent poem, and far too timely.
ReplyDeleteJohn, I tried to find a little more on the author but could not. It was far too close to home for me.
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