FARMING – amongst other things

It was a year ago on the 25th that mom died. Here’s to mom.

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This weeks Farming Update from Ben:

It was April of 2021 I started writing these farm updates.

This week I learned if I use the diesel pump for semi’s at the gas station, they pump fast. Like really REALLY fast! Twenty two gallons in about a minute! It’s awesome. I’m gonna make a habit of filling the truck with them when available.

I thought Padawan should have his own set of chainsaw chaps. (We have big plans for summer! He may not know this part of them yet…) I have pretty good chaps from Stihl, a very reputable name. When Kelly bought them for me – I think it was a Fathers Day Present- she said if I was going to have some, they better be good ones. Yep. I’d agree. And now I’m looking at them for P and I’m not sure how much we’ll really need them and good ones are $150+, so I look at cheaper ones and then I think, I’m going to skimp on something that could save his life?? I pictured myself at the ER. “Well, Doc, I thought they’d be good enough.”

I bought him a good Stihl pair.

It’s a little crazy around the farm. I went from late nights in rehearsal to late nights in the tractor. Life is still relentless! Daughter asks me why I’m out in the field. Well, because. Work to be done! I just keep thinking, what if I was still milking cows?? Add another four  hours into my day. 

Padawan is going to be able to go full time for me this summer. That will be huge. I was listening to a podcast in the tractor the other night and they talked about jobs and how people have ‘soft skills’ and ‘hard skills’. The hard skills can be taught. It’s the soft skills he needs help with. That can be our goal this summer. He’s got some of them, he’s a really nice young man, but he’s 19 and they’re not his focus right now. Just gotta bring them back to the surface. 

I had him doing fieldwork. A hard skill.

Get off the phone… a soft skill…

Sold some more straw to the Fire Department. They add it to their practice fires to make smoke. They tell me it’s the least toxic way to make smoke.

The oats is all planted.

Used the new Track Wacker! Or ‘Track Eraser’ as I learned the company calls this machine. It took a little finagling to get it adjusted and folding properly, but it worked great!

Folded and ready to go.
In field position.
Whacking a tire track!

After the first 100 yards I stopped to check and be sure everything was working on the grain drill. That’s when I made a terrible mistake. I backed up with the drill in the ground. The drill uses two disc’s, in a V shape, to get the seed into the ground. The front is the point and makes the seed trench. The back is open. And when I backed up, I filled that open V with dirt. I knew it felt wrong as I backed up and it took driving ahead another 20 yards before I saw it plugging up and knew what I had done. Crap. It’s tough cleaning them out. I had to go back home and get a long screw driver and vice grips and I got all but one cleaned out. The last one I had to take one disc off to get it cleaned. NOTE TO SELF: Don’t do that again. 

Wednesday I hooked up the new drag — the new to me drag– and went over all the oat fields. It worked pretty slick! 

Got the corn planter out and greased and ready to go. Paddie did that and hauled out deck furniture while I was using the drag. I gotta get a list of jobs for him when I’m doing something else. He needs more self motivation. Is that a hard or soft skill?

I headed out to the corn fields Thursday afternoon. With my buddy.

The chicks and chickens are doing well and they love a field of freshly tilled dirt.

Fresh Dirt!
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I thought, what should I listen to as I begin? I chose a ‘favorites’ playlist on shuffle mode and the first song was Mingo Saldivar playing ‘Rueda De Fuego’. 

Tex-Mex Ring of fire. Haha- perfect! 

Got a good start; enough to check seed depth, placement, and be sure everything was working on the corn planter. Then it rained a bit and I had time to go home and take a nap before coming back for another college show. 

Friday was a road trip (me and the dogs) to Byron for a 275 gallon water tote to water the trees. Then to Plainview for parts, then to Wabasha for another 100 trees. Back through Plainview, picked up stump killer for Kelly in her pursuit of buckthorn, and finally home. It was a nice drive. 

I planted another 40 tree’s. 60 to go! And it was Arbor Day to boot!

So farm so good! 

HARD SKILL OR SOFT SKILLS?

8 thoughts on “FARMING – amongst other things”

  1. Absolutely gorgeous photo of my girl Bailey!!

    While I feel that I have definite hard skills, I think my life leans more towards soft skills. I had to look up examples of hard and soft skills to make sure I was understanding them. If I am entirely self-taught in what seems like a hard skill, say cooking…. is it still a hard skill or does the self-teaching make it a soft skill?

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    1. I’d say cooking is a hard skill, or rather a suite of specific hard skills no matter how you acquire them. Choosing to acquire them, having the confidence and persistence to acquire them are soft skills. Deciding how to combine those skills in the cooking process is another soft skill.

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  2. Husband and the young man working for us when he’s not doing his cement day job are hauling bags of stones and the 150 bags of raised bed dirt into the back yard this morning. The rocks are for the bottom of the beds for drainage. Our helper is going to assemble the raised beds, too. He has really nice soft and hard skills.

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  3. Such a good picture of your mom, Ben; and then Bailey… Nice to see the chicks doing well.

    The soft, people skills (one way they described when I, too, looked it up come more naturally to me for some reason. I may have picked up some things from my dad, who ended up being a guidance counselor.

    I can learn the hard skills if motivated, but have found at some jobs that this isn’t always my forte. When I was a veggie coordinator (1979..) at the Wedge Co-op, I never was that great at getting everything displayed and looking its best. I’m good if the need for detail and organizing is involved, though.

    I need to do more cooking (hard skill?) around here, but am not very motivated, and have started cutting corners with more packaged and prepared foods. We don’t always have the greatest meals at this point.

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  4. Rise and Shine, Baboons,

    Yesterday I purchased a new keyboard (typing is a hard skill) because the old one refused to work anymore. The space bar was only working if I pressed it on the extreme left side which was making typing laborious! Thus, my short entries the past few days. This is soooo much easier today.

    Ben, thank you for your reliable Saturday posts. They are enjoyable and informative. And that is a lovely picture of your mom. Thanks for posting it.

    I also read the definition of hard and soft skills, offered up by AI summaries. I finished my career as a behavioral therapist teaching “soft” skills as if they are hard skills. And really they are hard skills if practiced and learned. But people push back hard at changing behavioral patterns because they always serve some kind of purpose, even if the purpose is not visible. Talk about living between the two types of skills.

    Is teaching a soft or hard skill? My guess is teaching is a combination of both. For example playing music would be a hard skill. But how do you teach the behavioral skill of practicing? Practice is a behavioral pattern performed regularly. How does the relationship of teacher/student affect the music? In the bad old days of abusive conductors, musicians hated those guys and found really subversive ways to get revenge. Now there is a soft skill in a hard skill world. Relationships, defined as soft skills, can drive people to perfect soft skills.

    So now I wonder, is there really a division between these two things or are they symbiotic.

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    1. Correctly administering an IQ test or other psychological tests is a hard skill. Interpreting the results is a soft skill that takes quite a while to master.

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