Tag Archives: farming

Wednesday Night Ramblings

Joel Gates of Green Gates Entertainment

So there’s a lot going on in the world today.  Between riots and massacres in the Middle East, surging oil prices, and labor disputes here in the Midwest, it’s easy to feel as if everything is coming unraveled.  There’s a feeling of panic in the air that’s hard to dismiss.  I feel it all around me, like an unspoken tension hanging in the room.  Some are scared that it’s the end of days, that Mayan or Biblical prophecies are coming true and that all we are seeing right now is a precursor to Armageddon.

Personally, I don’t believe that’s so.  I believe we’re simply in a transitional period between eras, and all of this turmoil and tension is a side effect of one era ending and another beginning.  The age of oil is dying.  For many years, the argument against alternative energies has been that economically they are too cost prohibitive and oil is too cheap.  Now, the pendulum is shifting the other direction.  Oil is simply becoming too expensive and too tumultuous to sustain.  Those with a vested interest in maintaining the status quo are trying desperately to maintain their grip on power, but the tide of change cannot be undone.  Their regime is coming to an end.

I don’t fear the dark days ahead.  Many years ago, I made peace with the fact that our society was going to implode.  You simply can’t sustain a democracy when the majority of your population can’t thrive in your economy.  You can’t sustain an economy when the majority of the jobs pay poverty level wages.  The supply side guys always seem to forget to look at the other side of the equation.  It’s supply and demand, and without both, the system grinds down.  Without a vibrant consumer class, there’s no one to buy what the supply side produces, and I’ve never quite figured out why that concept is so hard for some to figure out.

I also believe that we are about reap what we have sewn as a society and a culture.  Instead of embracing discipline, intelligence, and rational thought, we’ve chased greed, superficiality, and superstition.  We spend ten minutes on the morning news discussing Justin Beiber’s haircut while our infrastructure crumbles.  Anyone else having images of Nero with his fiddle?  While athletes and entertainers rake in millions, we pay police officers, firefighters, and teachers substandard wages, yet scratch our heads as to why nothing works as it should.

And now education is under heavy siege once again.  I’ve heard thoughtful, intelligent friends of mine say that they don’t believe their tax dollars should go to education because they either homeschool or send their children to private schools.  Why should their tax dollars go to a system they don’t even utilize, they ask.  Sure, on the surface they aren’t using the system directly, but I’d be willing to bet that when they hire someone at work, they expect that person to know how to read and write.  When they go to a grocery store, they expect the cashier to be able to count back correct change.  The role of public education isn’t just to educate your children.  It’s to educate everyone so that we have a skilled workforce, one that can compete and innovate and reinvent the economy.

The only change I can make and the only real impact I can have is with myself.  I have the power to create this farm and be part of the solution.  I’ve held back the tide for as long as I can in education, fighting the good fight to pass along my knowledge and love of language.  I simply don’t have it in me to take yet another pay decrease or take on even more responsibilities.  My plan is in motion, and I’m not looking back.

Today, we received two donations for the farm–one from an anonymous donor and one from Joel Gates of Green Gates Entertainment.  Joel has long been a supporter of these Ramblings, and we’re very grateful to have his endorsement for the farm.  Please, check out his blog and thank him for me.

Tuesday Morning Ramblings

Mari and Me Cleaning Around the Building

My will is set on starting the farm, and one way or the other, I will make it happen.  However, the simple reality is that as an educator, I don’t make a lot of money, so my biggest hurdle is finding the capital for the initial startup.  Recently, on Good Morning America, I saw a piece about a woman who needed to raise money for a photography business.  She used a site called Indie GoGo to request donations to help her get started.

After researching the company and mulling it over and discussing it with Mari, I decided to do the same.  Below is a link to our donations page.  If you can afford to donate $5-20 and would like to see this endeavor succeed, please follow this link and donate whatever amount is comfortable for you.  You have my guarantee that your donation will come to Mari and me and will be used to purchase materials for the farm and nothing else.  If you can’t afford to donate anything at this point, you can still help.  Please, share this link with your friends and family.  Please, help me spread the word.

I don’t like asking people for money, especially friends, but in order to get this farm running, we’re gonna need materials to renovate the building and equipment to operate the hydroponic units.  Any help you can offer will be much appreciated.  Thank you for your support.

A & M Organics

Thursday Afternoon Ramblings

The Building Before Cleanup

Back in the late 80’s/early 90’s, my parents opened a ceramic shop beside our home.  My father and ex-brother-in-law did most of the construction of the building, and I remember vividly how excited my parents were as everything took shape and the business launched.  I helped out some in those early years, mostly doing the late night work because I was a student at WSCC and worked a full-time job at Super 8.  With all of my obligations, I wasn’t able to offer them much time back then.

For the first couple of years, my father also had a second business, a snack cake wholesale and delivery service.  He had his own route and also several drivers who bought from him, and back then, that business was very lucrative.  The ceramics shop was in the back of the building, and the cakes were in the front.  I’m certain the health inspector wouldn’t have approved because of all the dust created by the ceramics, but for some reason, they never had to have an inspection that I’m aware of.  In the summers, I worked full-time for dad in the cake business because I’d grown up helping in it and knew quite a bit about the operation.  At 18 and 19, each summer I took over my father’s route to free him up to run each business.  I ran the delivery route through the week and drove to Georgia on the weekends to pick up from our supplier.  It was a lot of responsibility for a teenager, and it matured me quite a bit.

Then, I went to Memphis to pursue my bachelor’s degree.  With me leaving, Dad decided to sell off the cake business to a man who had recently been laid off from his job because of a budget cutback at the state.  The ceramics business was starting to take off, so at the time it seemed like a sound decision because Dad simply couldn’t juggle both businesses anymore.  Not too long after the cake business was sold, however, my parents realized just how much the revenue from it had been supporting the day to day operations of the ceramics.  There were a couple of very lean months that year, but they pushed through it and got the ceramics shop profitable and sustainable by the end of the year.

Then, in February of 93, I got a call early one morning from my grandmother, if memory serves.  Lightning had struck the building and before the fire department could respond, the front half of the building was destroyed.  Luckily, a firetruck had been nearby, and they were able to save the back half.  The firefighters did an excellent job, so please no hate mail about me disrespecting their work.  There are few professions I respect more than firefighting.  However, the damage to the building and the equipment was immense.  Two kilns, each costing $2,000+ were completely destroyed, and others needed hundreds of dollars in repairs.  The building was simply unusable.

After recovering from the initial shock, my parents gathered what equipment could be salvaged and moved the operation to our family’s 150 year old barn.  In that drafty, dirty, uncomfortable environment, they limped along and struggled to rebuild the building.  Defying all odds and raising suspicion among everyone, including ourselves, a year to the day later, a box fell against a kiln and burned the barn to the ground in a matter of minutes.  The wood was so dry and so old that it was a pile of embers before the fire department could respond.  The only saving grace this time was that much of the equipment had been moved back to the original building, and it had been rebuilt enough to be usable for them.

But honestly, they never really recovered from that second fire.  I came back from Memphis in 95 and worked for them quite a bit that last year or two of the business, and while they were able to survive month to month, they just couldn’t get it back to where it had gotten.  It wasn’t from lack of effort, either.  We all worked pretty hard to keep that business afloat, and to this day, closing it down weighs heavily on my father.

The reason why I bring this all up is because this weekend we’re probably going to sell off the molds from the ceramic shop, which are some of the last remaining relics of that endeavor.  After them, all we’ll have left of the equipment will be one kiln that may or may not work and two hulls of kilns that need to be hauled to the dump.  We’re getting rid of these materials to make way for the aeroponic units, and that progress is much welcomed and much needed.  The farm is our future and has the potential to be as successful as we choose to make it be, but there’s a part of me that’s sad to see the old stuff go.  There was a lot of sweat and energy and toil put into the ceramic business to keep it running.  And love.  My parents poured all of their love into it, and in some ways I feel like those molds have absorbed and still hold that love, so I’ll be a little sad when the molds are gone.

Out of respect for their efforts, I’ll work as hard as I can to make this farm successful, not only for myself but for my mother, and my father.  They all deserve to see something positive and productive rise up from all of their hard work.