I rarely tune into television any more. Even rarer that I would actually be tuned into the Super Bowl. It’s just not my style (though I do love watching a hometown football game). So it’s kind of strange that I flipped on the TV just as the Ram truck Super Bowl commercial came on. I wasn’t even sure what it was at first. I thought maybe it was a PBS documentary. The photography was stunning. Paul Harvey’s commentary more and more moving. I saw a picture of folded hands, scarred, weathered, and worn with hard work. They looked exactly like my father’s. I started to get tears in my eyes.

My family has been farming for five generations. My great-grandfather carved our farm out of old-growth forest in the Appalachian foothills with nothing more than an axe and draft horses. My father still remembers clearing a new field by hand as a boy, working alongside my grandfather and great-grandfather. My dad’s watched the farming industry go from small, local operations relying on draft horses and family bonds to industrial “big business” that has mechanized nearly everything and pushed small family farms to the brink of distinction.

Fence Post

I’m so proud of my older brother for having the courage to keep dairy farming on the same land, using many of the same principles, even in the face of this industrial onslaught. He works his ass off. I just wish there was real hope that all his hard work will actually pay off. But farming isn’t what it used to be. It’s nearly impossible any more to make a living at it the way my grandfather and great grandfather did. Still, he’s raising his daughter to love farming, and she’s determined to take over one day if my brother can keep it going through these lean years.
The farmers portrayed in that RAM truck commercial are a dying breed. While it makes my heart sad, I’m grateful that some advertising executive realized how moving telling their tale could be. Maybe, just maybe, it’ll remind people to support their local small farms. To really value the work and commitment that it takes to run a farm. Don’t buy a Ram truck. Buy some local produce, cheese, milk, or meat. And flowers. Don’t forget the flowers.

My dad shares his vast farming knowledge with two eager grandkids

My dad shares his vast farming knowledge with two eager grandkids