While we ate our lunch, we were conscience of the time. Specifically, how much time remained before share distribution was scheduled to start. There were still more beets and turnips left to harvest and rinse and set up time was fast approaching. Tasks were divided and last bites were hastily taken. We all love pick-up days but the clock seems to speed up once it hits noon. Each week, the team perfects their routine and then new crops are added to the harvest list and suddenly they need to accomplish all that they have in addition to more! Oh, and there's about a hundred cabbage moths hungrily looking for our kale and collards.....
I was talking with one of our town's long time residents last year and he asked how the farm was going. I told him it was going well and we generally joked about the ups and downs such as weather. Looking off to some distant point on the horizon, he asked, "didn't they try and tell you?" I thought we were talking about the rain but then it seemed like we were talking about something else. With "they" as in all those who have tried before to make a life and a living from the earth. "They" as in previous generations who had spent a lifetime trying to work with the cards that mother nature deals, pests who are forever trying to eat their crops and diseases that were constantly threatening to wipe out entire rows. It was a simple but direct question which I initially thought was rhetorical so I just nodded with a smile.
"Didn't they try and tell you?" the question was asked a second time this time in earnest. As in weren't you warned about the economic challenges, impossibly long to-do lists and back-braking manual labor? We have been warned. Alongside an entire new generation of farmers who have been warned, we enter into the profession anyway. We are going to give it a shot anyway. Not in spite of, but because of the farmers who have gone before us and given us an example of a way of life that appeals to us (for some crazy reason). A large motivational force for us is our children but we are also driven forward by the spirit of ancestors who cheer us on from the other side.