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Pine Plains Views

A Video Celebration of Rural Community

The Dairy Farm

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Article Index
The Dairy Farm
What Farmers Do
The Family Farm
A Good Cow
Livestock Pets
Heat
Departure Day
Killing Time
The Truck Arrives
OK, Cue the Cows!
Epilogue: Into the Future
The Future...
All Pages

 

This is a work in progress about a dairy farmer, Barry Chase, who is about to sell his herd of milking cows.  I visited with him and his wife, Rosey, a few days before their herd leaves.

Please bear with me while I edit videos (there are many) and write text.  But dairy farming is so much a part of the history and the legacy of Pine Plains I want to put in the skeleton of this sequence as an indicator of what is coming.

First, meet some cows...

 

 

Selling a herd is nothing new in our county.   It's been going on for years. Here are the USDA figures for Dutches County.

 

Milk Cows

Number on farms

1950         23,422
1959         22,017
1969         16,422
1978         13,500
1982         13,000
1987          8,700
1992          5,000
1997           3,500
1998           3,500
1999           3,000
2000          3,300
2001          2,500
2002          2,500
2003          2,900
2004          3,400

There were, until fairly recently, dozens of dairy farms in the Pine Plains area.  Milk production and processing was the mainstay of the local economy.  But now, as there are only a handful of farmers still milking, people who have moved in from the City or are too young to remember, the familiarity with the way of life of the dairy farmer has passed, too. I hope that this sequence of videos will preserve that way of life if not the farms.

Enough.  Let's meet Barry.




 

So, the cows are off in the pasture doing what they do to make milk.  Eat!

And the farmers go off and do what they have to do to feed the cows.  Make hay!

I'm sure you've already noticed something... milk may make strong bones, but milking is really hard on the joints. Dairy farming is, literally, back-breaking work and in the next few pages you'll see just how hard that work is.

 



Farming entails a lot more than raising crops and animals.  It means fixing and repairing machinery and keeping it running...

 

 

You've all seen silos,  those towering cylinders next to the barns.  No matter what is inside can get stuck and there is only one way to unstick it.

 

 



This really is a family farm.  Rosey, a professor at the local community college, does more than just "help out" with the hard work on this very hot day.

 

 


 

 

 


Barry asked me to take a picture of one of his favorite cows.  And it was my chance to get an answer to a question that I have had for a long time:  what is the conformation of a good cow?

We chatted a bit about breeding, a very important part of dairy farming because the cows only milk because they have young.

 

 


Are there favorites in the herd?

 

 

 


It was hot... very hot... None of us could keep our minds off he heat.  Barry gave it a "shot," though.

 

 


 

 

 

Graining before milking.

 

 


There is always some job that has been put off and can now be done as a distraction before the truck comes for the herd.

 

 There's always a fence that needs mending...

 Halters will help move the cows.  Might as well put them on now. 

 

 

 

   


It would be one thing to get the cows onto the truck... but once we saw the truck we realized that it was going to be a job just to get the truck onto the farm!

It's called a "pot truck" and you'll see why very soon. 

 

 Barry suggested that I take a look at the pot from inside the truck and see it from the cows' point of view. 


Click to Play Video

 

 

 


Now we were ready to load the cows.  But were they ready? 

 

 

Time to say goodbye. 

 But this is not the end...


The  County Fair in Rhinebeck, New York.  About 500,000 people come to this fair to eat and then have that food just about evacuated from them on rides.  They buy things, play games, and have a good time spending money for the benefit of the Dutchess County Agricultural Society for, as it claims, "the promotion of agriculture, horticulture, mechanical and domestic arts, fine arts and allied sciences through education, instruction, display and competition."

Let the video speak for itself...

 

So, what does this have to do with Barry's cows or any kind of farming, anyway?

Perhaps I'm not being fair (pun intended) because although there are no farmers on display along the Midway, the fair attracts and educates many people for their first and most basic exposure to agriculture.  A few years ago, we spent a week showing a couple of our horses at the agricultural tent to let people who obviously had never been up close to a real horse touch and ask questions about them. I overheard a family in earnest (in fact, heated)  discussion about whether those cows being milked were "boys" or "girls" or even both.  We are talking basic education here!


To find any evidence of agriculture, or an animal that is not plush/stuffed, you have to go up to what is almost another fair, up on "The Hill" where the 4-H Clubs compete and show their animals. 

And it is here, up on The Hill, where you will also meet some  folks from Pine Plains.

Gina and her father are going to continue milking at Barry's barn and have started  building up their own herd. 

I am following their progress and you can see some of it to you here.

Home

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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written by Rupert Howe , February 19, 2009

Thank you for recording all this and sharing it. It's quite a document.
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written by Richard Leigh , July 13, 2009

Thank God I gave up Dutchess County dairy farming in 1963. Wonderful life for five days a week. I saw where big ag was running the future show and we were doomed. We didn't own the land like the Chase family. My grand father did and I would have had to pay him for 40 years. Later, however, I was able to retire at age 46 from a police dept. Sure, I had to handle real dirty things and a load of stress but I have a check coming every month. I'm not in debt, don't own a lot of land and if it rains two weeks straight, so what. Yes, I had to re-invent my future. My poor mom died of pancreatic cancer, contracted from the sprays of chemicals... I believe. She washed cows udders with a rag dipped in a dark brown chemical. Oh well, I think you get the picture. Good luck to the Chase family! From Richard Leigh of Pleasant Valley, N.Y.
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Why

I came to Pine Plains a few years ago by choice, not by chance of birth. But the small-town rural community I chose is changing. The farmers have, for the most part, sold to people from the city and fields are becoming lawns.

I am making this journal to preserve what I can of a changing way of life and to share it with the community. On a more personal level, I am making this as a way of holding on to the reasons why I came here.

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