Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Cowboying isn't as romantic as it seems

Today I thought I was going to work on the portable poultry pen. Right after I got started Dad called and needed some help moving the cows. I met him, Jake and Bob Jr. at Flagon Pasture. Since it was time to put bug repelling ear tags in the "momma" cows, we were trying to herd them to the catching pen so we could tag them. We had a bit of trouble with this because, among other things, one cow didn't want to go and the new head stall wouldn't open wide enough for the cows to go through. It didn't take long to sort those things out. We were almost done. One more to go: one of the new heifers.  All we needed was for her to walk out of the pen.  Dad was trying to herd her toward the gate and she didn't want to go. She turned, sprinted with her head down and slammed into dad at full speed throwing him to the ground and into one of the cattle panels. She hit him so hard that his body bent one of the steel panels. She ran over him, made a lap, and ran over him again, stepping on his head. She continued to run around the pen trying to find the way out, hitting the panels that Dad was trying to roll under in order to get away. Jake, Bob Jr. and I were scrambling to figure out how to get her out and get Dad out of harm's way. She hit the panels one last time, knocking them apart and running out. Dad was left laying in the manure and bleeding from his head. After a moment, he made his way up, and we all went to the house to check out the damage. Wouldn't you know, he was cracking jokes before he even got up. That's my dad, cowboy through and through. He's fine, by the way. He did have to go get staples in his head, but he's tuff. Some days cowboying is fun, some days its hard, and some days it's just painful.
--Will

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Grandpa's Stories #3

Another installment of the memoir of Ivan Butterfield, told in his own words.

Dad and Mother were great competitors when working at the art of farming. They were known for their corn husking abilities and to watch them shuck corn was a real show. It was not unusual for each of them to shuck one hundred and twenty-five bushels of corn in a day’s time. If there was a winner in their little friendly competitions, it was usually Mother. They always got their teams ready early and were in the field at sunup. They would have bang boards piled high and away they went. Bang boards were generally twelve inch boards the length of the wagon bed, stacked edge-wise one on top of the other with up and down cleats to support them. The higher the bang boards, the less they had to watch where they were throwing in order to get the ears of corn in the wagon. I remember seeing them start at the end of a row, put me in the front corner of one of the wagons, ask each other if they were ready. Possibly one of them would make a small bet of one kind or another and then one of them would yell, “Let’s Go!” From then on there was never a moment that there was not an ear of corn in the air until the wagons were full. If there was a shuck showing on any ear of corn, someone was sure to get a ribbing, such as “No wonder you got so much, you didn’t shuck it, you just snapped it!” Dad and Mother were very much in demand at harvest time and picked corn for many of the neighbors.


There was quite a crop of rats at about this time and the neighbors would get together and have what I would call rat kills. They would bring cars and tractors to the appointed farm, back them up to the barns, corn cribs, etc. and put a hose from the exhaust pipe to the rat runs under whichever building and then stand back with clubs and boards to kill the rats when the exhaust fumes drove them out into the open. The neighbors would go from one farm to another in this fashion and where they killed the most rats, that farmer had to feed everyone an oyster stew or ice cream or something of that nature.  At some farms I have seen large piles of dead rats at the end of a kill. In those days the neighbors were always getting together to solve their various problems, whether it was gathering crops for someone who was sick, putting in the crops for some unfortunate friend, building a house or barn, or anything else they could do to help their friends and neighbors.

I remember Dad and Mother telling me about getting me a new pair of shoes, of which I was very proud. I was told to put the shoes back in the shoebox and to go to bed. That night Dad caught a young opossum and took my shoes out of the box and put the opossum in. When I got up the next morning and went to see my new shoes, they said I ran into the kitchen screaming that a opossum had eaten my shoes!

Dad also told me about the time he had a sow about to farrow and just before bedtime he asked me if I hadn’t better go down to the barn and see if the sow had lain down. According to Dad I drawled, “If she ain’t got sense enough to lay down, let her stand up.”

We were thrashing at our house and many neighbors were at our place assisting in the harvest. Among them was my dad’s younger brother, Glen. Uncle Glen had a Ford touring car that he had just recently purchased and wanted it in out of the sun. Dad told him he could put it in the driveway of the barn. The barn was on a rather high knoll and you had to go up quite a hill to get into the driveway. At the bottom of the hill was a large, wooden fence. As usual, I was showing off for the other kids who were there and I decided to show them I knew how to drive my uncle’s car. I got into the car and released the handbrake and it started to roll. I think my sister, Mary, was among those who tried to hold it from rolling but to no avail. It rolled out of the barn, down the hill and somehow turned just enough that it didn’t hit the fence. Did I ever get my bottom tanned!!

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Calves, calves, and more calves!

What's going on at the farm?  Calves are being born!  It seems like every other week, and sometimes every other day, a new calf is being born.  It's so much fun to watch the calves learn to walk and then romp and play with their new calf friends.  Calves are so much more fun to watch than cows, by the way!  They act like school children playing tag.  Our kids love to go see the calves on the homestead pasture and feed the cows alfalfa grass on Flagon Pasture.  If your kids would like to do the same, just give us a call!  We'd love to have you over!

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Our Christmas Present

Last night Bethany wanted to go and check on the "momma" cows. We had one that was looking like she would deliver any minute. Dad had gone out and checked a few hours earlier, but Beth insisted. Once again, she was right! We found her out in the woods beginning to labor. We stood around and watched for a long time. While we were watching we could hear a sort of a moan/mooing that she was making. I'm not 100% sure, but I'm pretty sure that a few times I even heard some of the other cows moan with her. It is amazing to me how social they can be. There were several times that she would begin to pace to ease the pains and the other cows would follow.

Even though we wanted to stay and watch the whole thing, we had to get our two babies in the bed so we left the momma cows to do what they were made to do. When we got up this morning we called Dad. He said that he had gone back out there around two that morning and the calf had already been born. So we bundled up and took John Luke and Sayleigh out to see our "Christmas" calf. (I can't be sure that she was, in fact, born on Christmas day, but I'm choosing to think that way.) Both the momma and the calf are doing great!

In church this morning we sang Away in a Manger.  In one of the verses it talks about the cattle lowing and I couldn't help but think about that momma laboring last night and the gentle lowing that she was making. Having helped Bethany through the birth of both of our children, I know the importance of having moral and emotional support there for the mom. I can only imagine that as Mary was laboring, she was comforted by the animals that were there. I thank God for these experiences. They draw me and my family closer to Him. This Christmas was made a little more special by the birth of a Christmas calf and God using that to remind me of what He has done for us, His children. Merry Christmas!

-Will

To see more pictures of the "Christmas" calf visit our website. http://www.butterfieldfarm.net/

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Come on out!

Over the past several months we’ve talked to our family and friends about the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) concept and our hope to involve our friends in the family farm.  Until now there really haven’t been many opportunities for our friends to be involved.  That’s all about to change…

Many folks would think that there’s not a lot going on during the winter months, but we’re actually quite busy.  Over the next 3 months (actually starting any day!) calves will be born at the Homeplace farm.  Our ryegrass/clover pastures at Flagon Pasture are looking great, and the yearling calves are happy and growing under the watchful eyes of one of our more experienced “Momma Cows”.  Feeding, checking fences, building water facilities, still more fences, and on and on.

My point is, come on out! Call the farm and we’ll get together on times to come out and see what’s happening, take some pictures, get an up-close look at a cow or calf and let the kids (and maybe some adults too!) see what “life on the farm” is all about.
-John

Monday, December 13, 2010

Grandpa's Stories #2

Another installment of the memoir of Ivan Butterfield, told in his own words. Each story is a continuation of the last, so be sure to read the previous "Grandpa's Stories" post to refresh your memory.


Driving Ms. Eva
    ...For some reason, I don't remember anything about Mother and my sister Mary (who was three years older) until after we had moved to the Frazier place.  They must have been moving small things in our Patterson touring car, although you could have moved larger things in it cause it was huge!  Dad always seemed to be in charge of the upkeep of the roads around our place and since tractors were scarce as hen's teeth, Dad used the car to tow the wooden drag that he used to keep the road smooth.  On occasion, he allowed me to ride on the drag, that is until Mother found out and that ended that!

     There was a lady that lived one mile north of us with her aged mother.  She was so large that when she talked Dad into taking her to Diagonal to shop (which she did periodically) Dad had to help her in and out of the car and she actually broke the rear springs of the car on whatever side she sat on.  Her name has just come to me--Eva Bodie.  Anyway, one time we were taking her to town when another very old lady came out and flagged us down.  We were probably traveling about 20-25 miles per hour when she stopped us and told Dad there was a snake under her house.  Dad went over, found and killed the rattlesnake, and we went on to town.  We broke so many springs on that car that Mother finally put her foot down and told Dad he would have to tell Eva that if she wanted to go to town by car, she would have to buy her own.  I don't remember if she did or not.  I do remember that Dad, Mother, Mary and I went to her house one day and she told Dad that she couldn't find her mother.  Eva was so large she could hardly walk, to say nothing of getting through the door which, by the way, Dad had already made larger for her, so Dad went out to the barn to look for her mother.  He found her dead in the corn crib.  Apparently she must have been out doing chores and had a heart attack or else just died of old age!...

   Grandpa's story pauses here and moves on to another subject.  He does not speak again of Ms. Eva.  While some of you may find this ending shockingly abrupt, I find that the abruptness is what makes the story so interesting and even humorous.  Most of Grandpa's stories share this bluff, forthright attitude.  His frank descriptions of everyday depression era life are endearing and make me want to read more.  I hope you share the same sentiments!  
   P.S. I know this story has nothing to do with the current Christmas season, but it was next in line.  I'm searching for a Christmastime story from Grandpa.  If I find one, I'll be sure to break out of the timeline and share it with you!  Merry Christmas!
-Bethany

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Endangered Human Species

As an educator, I encounter a diverse group of children as well as their parents on a daily basis. Through my interactions with a variety of people in the last few weeks, I have had my values and expectations for my students questioned. Those who know and love me despite my immediate emotional reactions understand that this has really bothered me and as a result, I have been thinking quite a bit about it. During one of my reflections on my home from UA last night, I recalled not only all the things that make me who I am, but also more importantly all of the people who have helped mold me into the person I am. Then I thought of a recent lesson with my students on the “Endangered Human Species.”


The endangered human species are those people who are becoming rarer and rarer with each passing day. Two particular groups of people intrigued my students: those who stay on the line when they have dialed the wrong number just to apologize for doing so and those children who would rather read than play video games. I am proud to say that I can fit into both of those “endangered species” only because of my parents and the Butterfield family who showed me the way. “Butterfields” are endangered species. It is not often in today’s society that you find a family like ours. We are family who holds their values dear and devotes themselves to teaching others the benefits of hardwork, dedication, service, and above all devotion to our Savior.

It is my desire to serve as a good role for not only my children, but also for all children. I believe our family can take “Butterfields” off the endangered species list by continuing to serve the Lord and others. Thank you to each person who has shown me what it means to be a Butterfield!

~Jen