How Great The Yield From A Fertile Field

Random musings from an old farmer about life, agriculture, and faith

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Oldest

We started our day Sunday morning, driving in moderate fog.  It cleared as we were driving through Peoria on our way West and the rest of the drive went well. We drove to Burlington for the day to visit Son#2.  We had no trouble finding church even though it has been 35 years since I was last there.  For some reason I was expecting a church of mostly elderly folks, but as it turned out, I was the oldest Brother in church Sunday!  There were a few older Sisters, but all of the older couples had gone South for the winter or were visiting elsewhere.  I started feeling a little out of place!

After a blessed day in church, we spent some time at Brett's house, where Son#2 lives.  After changing clothes and having a snack, COO Aaron gave us a tour of HawkeyePedershaab.  I was impressed with the tools, machinery, processes, and of course, the finished products.  I was expecting more of an assembly line type factory, but it is really a very large custom shop.  It looks like a first class company and a good place to work.

We were invited to Brett's parents house for dinner along with other family and friends from the Burlington/Mediapolis area.  We were blessed with good food and fellowship and then had to hit the road for the trip back home.  Fortunately it is only a two hour drive.

 
   Thus saith the Lord of hosts; There shall yet old men and old women dwell in the streets of Jerusalem, and every man with his staff in his hand for very age.
Zechariah 8:4

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Recovery

Wednesday night, about the time people were driving home from work, a heavy fog rolled into the area.  There was a great deal of concern about the danger of people driving to church in the heavy fog.  As a church trustee, I contacted the rest of the trustees, and the decision was made at about 6:10 to cancel services.  Before I received the message from One Call Now (the service we use to alert the entire congregation) at 6:25, a rain front rolled through the area and dissipated the fog.
We would have been fine having church.  Oh well!
We listened to the sermon from Fairbury on AC Central.

A week and a half ago, I underwent outpatient surgery.  I believe it was my first time under the knife (other than a finger operation), and my first time under general anesthesia.  The surgeon planned to do the repair work with laparoscopic surgery, but was unable to complete the job correctly.  So, I was then sliced open to do the job through open surgery.  Now I have four incisions to heal in my abdomen!  I am thankful that everything went well, I had minimal pain, and no complications so far.  I was given a prescription for Tylenol plus Codine for pain, but everybody in my family that has used it in the past has gotten sick from it.  I definitely didn't want to be throwing up with abdominal wounds and sutures, so I didn't use it!  I was able to get by with Ibuprofen for three days and then I didn't need anything.

I ran into three female nurses I know in pre-op and post-op while wearing my less than full coverage hospital gown.  Not to mention that my surgeon was female, the anesthesiologist and her intern were female, as well as all the support staff in the operating room!  I guess at my age it's not much use getting embarrassed anymore!

We are blessed with access to superb health care, and I realized again as I witnessed others in the hospital at how blessed I am to be healthy.

The worst part now is that I'm feeling so good that I am ready to get back to normal activities.  But my surgeon looked me right in the eyes and said, "Be very careful and do not lift anything heavier that 15 pounds for 6 weeks!"  I begged and pleaded, but she was adamant.  I told her I would do my best, but I am afraid that I will forget myself.  I can't lift feed or seed bags, pigs, straw bales, scoop manure, or lift grand-kids!
I'm afraid that I will get out of shape and gain weight!

 Heal me, O Lord, and I shall be healed; save me, and I shall be saved: for thou art my praise.
Jeremiah 17;14




Friday, January 06, 2017

Stockyards

From the time I was an early grade schooler, I can remember having to get up early mornings before school to help Dad load hogs to be hauled to Peoria.  In the summer, if I wasn't too tired, I would ride to Peoria with him.  The stockyards was a very busy place with dozens of trucks jockeying for chutes to unload cattle, hogs, and sheep.  We often had to wait a few minutes before backing up to the chute/pen and unloading our hogs.  Then we would report in to the yard office with our farm info, pen number, and the commission firm we wanted to handle our sale.  We always used IPLA ( Interstate Producers Livestock Association - a farmer owned Co-op).  Another popular commission firm was "the Dick Herm Firm."  Either Dick Herm or Dewey Christopherson would give the stockyards report on the WMBD radio noon farm show.

There was a large office building on site that had a restaurant in the lower level for the employees, farmers, and truckers.  It was acceptable to wear your livestock clothes and boots in there, so sometimes Dad would stop for breakfast before heading back home.  Stockyards Farm Supply and Tractor Supply stores were located just outside of the gates, so we often would stop to pick up supplies on our way home.
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After I got my drivers license, I started taking turns hauling the loads to the stockyards.  Our truck held 30 - 34 head, depending on weight (which in those days was 210 to 220 lbs.).  We usually loaded at 6:00 A.M. and got to Peoria around 7:00 A.M. Traffic was light then, but I did enjoy driving down Washington Street, downtown Peoria, with a load of smelly, squealing hogs between the Caterpillar Headquarters and their parking deck with the executives in suits and dresses waiting to cross the street!

Since winter storms usually came out of the west, we would watch the weather and when a snowstorm moved into Iowa, we would plan on hauling hogs the next morning.  With Iowa shut down, the packers would bid up the Peoria hogs and we could catch a $2 higher market for braving the incoming snowstorm.

Established in 1874, the Peoria Union Stockyards eventually became one of the largest "livestock hotels" in the country.  Originally, the idea was to feed grain mash byproducts from the local distilleries to cattle, but soon it became a livestock market.  The capacity as a feedlot was 28,000 head of cattle.  Peoria was once known as the "whiskey capital of the world". Even while I was growing up, the Hiram Walkers distillery (now ADM ethanol plant) was the largest distillery in the world.  The stockyards were built along the river and along the railroad tracks.  In the early days livestock would come in by rail, barge, or horse-drawn wagon.  Soon, packing plants sprang up around it, and at the packing prime in the 30's up to 1000 people were employed by the yards and the packing plants.  Peoria became the 6th largest hog market in the nation, with 11,400 hogs handled on its biggest day.  The biggest year for sheep was 79,000 head.  In the mid '70's, the stockyards handled 1.3 million head of livestock per year.  When I was hauling, they typically handled 2000 cattle and 7000 hogs per day.



But the packing plants were closing, consolidating, and moving to rural areas.  By the mid '80's, farmers were shipping hogs direct to the packers and pooling semi trailer loads, bypassing Peoria.  Farms got bigger and bigger with fewer small farms.  The Stockyards downsized several times, and recently were just handling numbers in the hundreds.  It was one of the last remaining stockyards in the Midwest.

The week before Christmas, the stockyards shut down for good.  It is no more.
The Peoria Union Stockyards are now just a part of history.

 And they brought their cattle unto Joseph: and Joseph gave them bread in exchange for horses, and for the flocks, and for the cattle of the herds, and for the asses: and he fed them with bread for all their cattle for that year.
Genesis 47:17
     

Sunday, January 01, 2017

New Year

When I went out to do chores before sunrise this morning, I was greeted by a calm, crisp, still, peaceful, clear morning with a light frost covering everything.  What a beautiful way to start the new year!

We had our last Christmas gathering on Wednesday night, so our Christmas is officially over.  The big extended family Christmas was two weeks ago Saturday, and our own family gathering was on Christmas Eve.  It's fun watching our kids exchange gifts and watching the grandchildren open gifts.  Books remain a staple gift.  I believe somewhere between 30 and 40 books changed hands at that gathering!  I received seven books myself over the holidays, and have finished two of them already.  One of them (Dear County Agent Guy), had this quote that I found amusing.

      Marriage is a dicey proposition at best.  Half of all unions end in divorce court, while the other half end at the funeral parlor.  Neither prospect seems very pleasant!

Christmas day was a laid back, relaxing day for us.  We had the oldest farmer and my mother over for our traditional oyster stew supper in the evening.  Of course, I didn't partake of the oyster stew.  That's one of the few seafood dishes that I don't particularly enjoy.

Since Christmas fell on Sunday this year, our fellowship lunch and the second service were cancelled.  Christmas is the celebration of our Lord's birth, and Sunday is the Lord's day, so it would seem to me that the most appropriate thing to do when Christmas lands on Sunday, would be to spend it with our church family in worship and fellowship.

It only happens about fourteen times per century.
It seems like nowadays people look for any reason they can find to cancel services or reduce the amount of time we have to spend in church.

I am reminded of the Kingsmen Quartet song, "Excuses".


Excuses, excuses, you'll hear them every day.
And the Devil he'll supply them, if the church you stay away.
When people come to know the Lord, the Devil always loses
So to keep them folks away from church, he offers them excuses.

In the summer it's too hot. And, in the winter, it's too cold.
In the spring time when the weather's just right, you find some place else to go.
Well, it's up to the mountains or down to the beach or to visit some old friend.
Or, to just stay home and kinda relax and hope that some of the kin folks will start dropping in.

Well, the church benches are too hard. And, that choir sings way too loud.
Boy, you know how nervous you get when you're sitting in a great big crowd.
The doctor told you, "Now, you better watch them crowds. They'll set you back."
But, you go to that old ball game because you say "it helps you to relax."

Well, a headache Sunday morning and a backache Sunday night.
But by worktime Monday morning, you're feeling quite alright.
While one of the children has a cold, "Pneumonia, do you suppose?"
Why the whole family had to stay home, just to blow that poor kid's nose.

Excuses, excuses, you'll hear them every day.
And the Devil he'll supply them if the church you stay away.
When people come to know the Lord, the Devil always loses
So to keep them folks away from church, he offers them excuses.

Well, the preacher he's too young. And, maybe he's too old.
The sermons they're not hard enough. And, maybe they're too bold.
His voice is much too quiet-like. Sometimes he gets too loud.
He needs to have more dignity. Or, else he's way too proud.

Well, the sermons they're too long. And, maybe they're too short.
He ought to preach the word with dignity instead of "stomp and snort."
Well, that preacher we've got must be "the world's most stuck up man."
Well, one of the lady's told me the other day, "Well, he didn't even shake my hand."

Excuses, excuses, you'll hear them every day.
And the Devil he'll supply them if the church you stay away.
When people come to know the Lord, the Devil always loses
So to keep them folks away from church, he offers them excuses.
So to keep them folks away from church, he offers them excuses.




And they all with one consent began to make excuse. The first said unto him, I have bought a piece of ground, and I must needs go and see it: I pray thee have me excused.
Luke 14:18