Recently, I heard part of an episode of the Like a Farmer podcast. The guest was Sean Gleason, CEO of Professional Bull Riders (PBR), and he suggested that:
Every kid in America should have to go work on a farm for a couple of months in a summer during their lifetime because it'd teach them values — the value of hard work, that this life isn't just handed to you, you gotta go make the most of it.
Around the same time, I ran across a 2021 study that suggested that 40% of children between the ages of four and seven had no idea where much of their food came from. They thought that bacon and chicken nuggets came from plants, not pigs and chickens. Forty-seven percent of the kids thought French fries come from animals. Most of them said that it's not okay for people to eat cows and pigs, even though I'm betting many of them eat them daily.
(And if you think that's bad, let's all remember the 2017 survey that suggests that 7% of adults in the United States think chocolate milk comes from brown cows.) That is 17.3 million people lol.
Back to the kids. An article at Meat Eater responded to that study with this:
As nice as the idea of picking bacon flowers may sound, it’s seriously alarming to learn that such a large portion of kids in the group surveyed believe that meat comes from plants. Wait a moment, do you hear that? The hunters, farmers, and ranchers are yelling from the back of the room: 'Hey, our kids know where their food comes from!'
All of this got me to thinking: Kids do need to get back to learning some basics, and a farm or ranch is a great place to do that. I don't know about forcing every kid in the United States to spend two months there — that wouldn't fly anyway; I can hear the bureaucrats screaming now — but if schools ditched all the critical race theory, gender ideology, and woke stuff and just taught kids some hands-on, real-life lessons, this country would be in a much better place.
Not only would kids learn where food actually comes from, but, as Gleason said, they would learn the value of hard work. They'd learn that's how to make money and get ahead in life. And they'd learn so much more that you can't teach in a classroom.
South Harrison Community School Corporation in Indiana offers student farm internships, and on its website, it posted a list of what two high school seniors who participated learned during their time on the farm in 2023. A strong work ethic was one — knowing your hard work will eventually pay off. Skills like teamwork, time management, and problem-solving were also listed — skills many employers say candidates lack these days. The students said they also learned patience and how to accept the things you can't control (how many kids will settle for nothing less than instant gratification in modern times?), and they simply learned how to appreciate the little things in life, like a beautiful sunset.
Another article I found from the Kansas Farm Food Connection talks about a child named Mylee who, at the time, was just five years old, but she'd placed in a national competition in speech. How? Mylee, a little farm girl, shows goats in the Pee Wee division of the Junior American Boer Goat Association National Show, and she was already teaching her younger sister how to do it, too.
"Farm kids are smarter than we give them credit for because farm life exposes them to a lot of lessons many adults don’t ever experience," the article says.
And it's true. The article goes on to point out that at the age of five, little Mylee already knows the importance of being responsible for the lives of others because she takes care of her goats, and she's already gained many important entrepreneurial skills as well. She learns about safety being around farm equipment, and she knows a lot about science and nature, and the way the world works. She even knows the "birds and the bees," as the article put it, something many adults don't even seem to understand these days. Finally, Mylee understands competition, and at such a young age, she knows that sometimes you don't win. This doesn't sound like a participation trophy kind of girl. (I'm also guessing she knows where bacon comes from.)
That's just scratching the surface. A farm life education works for adults, too. I'm living proof. About a decade ago, someone I know ordered some chickens and got too many, so she asked if I'd like the seven extras. I'd been thinking about getting some chickens, so I said yes. That was a life-changing moment for me. In the first few weeks I learned so much — carpentry from building them a coop, the facts of life when one of them died at just a few days old no matter how hard I tried to save her, how to raise them to be healthy, how much fun they could be (suddenly, I found that watching baby chicks play was a lot more fun than watching TV). I felt more connected to the natural world.
I'll confess something here: In those early days, I was kind of scared of the chickens. The first time I let them out as adults for some free range time, I carried a broom around in case one of them tried to attack me. I went a bit overboard on their care. I took them to the vet when they were sick or injured and anxiously posted on message boards, asking for advice when something seemed even a little bit off.
Fast forward to present times, and I have even more chickens (and ducks — they're my favorites), and I no longer carry a broom around. I rarely go to the message boards for advice. And not too long ago, one of the chickens had something wrong with her, and I had my dad hold her for me in my bathroom while I performed surgery on her myself, rather than rushing off to the vet. Not only was it successful, but I also kept her wound from getting infected, and she thrived afterward.
Those little birds have taught me so much beyond animal husbandry. They've taught me those important life skills like problem-solving, creativity, and time management. They've built my confidence. They've taught me responsibility — there are days I don't want to go outside when it's 95 degrees and take care of them, but they need me. I have a greater appreciation for nature. I get more exercise than I used to. And I know where much of my food comes from. Try eating an egg from the grocery store after eating your own farm-fresh ones, and you'll gag. I also get to provide healthy food for others, which makes me feel good. At the start of the pandemic, when people were worried about food shortages, I knew that wouldn't be a problem for me.
I studied biology and agriculture in school, but I've learned so much more about the realities of all of that by doing than I ever did in a book. I enjoy the "farm life" now and can't imagine living any other way. I'm also extremely grateful that it kind of accidentally chose me and gave me the type of education I would have never received otherwise.
And I think it's beyond time our children receive a similar education. All the technology and woke ideologies in the world won't change the very basic concepts of life, no matter how hard many try to pretend they will. We're doing our children a disservice by teaching them that those basics don't matter anymore.
In my day, (creaks in chair) we were taught how to cook basic survival food, after school, but IN the school building, in boyscouts (brownies? Yes that stuff was segregated - think of it). Things like oat flapjacks and scones, but I remember an exciting day when we roasted a whole chicken - and shared it amongst the ten of us LOL. The best bit was the roasted in-the-skin potatoes we smuggled from our pockets into the camp-fire for the occasion.
At 15, the school I went to, offered cordon-blue cooking classes, once a week on Tuesday afternoons, as part of the curriculum [LOL I was privileged]. I was quite a to-do making an ingredients basket on that day of the week. That year, we made Victoria sponges by hand (lots of exercise). We learned about Hollandaise sauces, White sauces, real stock from scratch, and how to make custard over a double boiler. We did fish, meats and baking. My family had traditional fermented Christmas pudding with hand-whipped brandy-butter that year [out-of-this-world highlight]. That's it: One year of once-a-week instruction.
My point is: Anybody can learn how to cook, and it's not 'demeaning' to learn that stuff. It can save your life if you intend to be a student at university (My place was always havin peeps over for a meal - I made a Paella that drew them in LOL). Most kids kill themselves with instant noodles and beer.
I mean, chefs are taught, and it is an honorable thing to do. Not sayin I am one, but I knew a few things [as explained]. My kids are doing meals-on wheels for their grandparents, even. And, the grandies love it - much better than anything else, they reckon - you see, I taught my kids that cookin stuff. So I don't see why 'home economics' should only be taught to girls who aren't gunna make it academically - which was already the case in the nineties - everybody only wanted to learn 'IT' and skools were all about 'getting online'. Home Economics was seen as 'so last century'. But, we all have to eat.
Long Story short: Bring Back learnin-to-cook at schools.
Absolutely! If you like to eat? You ought to learn how to cook.
Raised to be stupid, and taught to be nothing at all.
All by design...
The farm kids were always the smartest in the class, might not have gotten the top grades, but they were the smartest.
How embarrassing that so many children are stupid...
Well, there used to be a lot more farm kids as well as kids who did chores at home. That all changed in the mid 2000s.
Such a shame..
That's a fact jack.
But it's a fact we can change...
A bacon plant, take my money!
I'd have all my rows planted with Bacon lol.
Have to be a cool weather crop though. I can't imagine the bugs would leave them alone.
My 4-H kid manned the Petting Zoo for the buses of urban kids at the County Fair. They also had hands-on projects for the kids, to dig a potato or pick an apple from a tree. NO KIDDING, the kids thought these foods came from the grocery store!
Bet that was a shocker.
I love 4H! Girl Scouts was fun too, but 4 H had the fair & all the animals!
I still have my blue ribbons for chocolate chip cookies🤠
Well said, kids go to school today are taught only bullshit, yet not one of them knows what a bull is or has clean up after the cows leave the barn after milking is done.
I am not surprised. They are not being educated at all, in my opinion.
Farm kids are often more worldly when it comes to the earth and natural workings. Because they have to be. It comes with the territory of living on a farm and being a source of free labor for Mom and Dad.
Urban kids as an example are often more streetwise and more perceptive in somethings like reading a room in comparison to their compatriots from the Suburbs and Rural areas.
Different Environments and Selection Biases. And making stints on farms mandatory runs the risk of only breeding resentment among the kids forced to participate in it.
A frankly easier and more politically feasible solution would be overhauling the Educational System. Restore classes that were cut, or had content trimmed in favor of the switch to Academic focus/College prep. Remove limits on how much you can sign up for them and frankly make it easier to offer internships, and part-time Summer Jobs to Students.
That and frankly drop some of the barriers to teaching. Part of the problem is we have the blind teaching the blind. Meaning people going right into Teaching right out of school. Without any actual real-life experience of their own. How can one expect people who haven’t themselves lived life to teach about it? Restoring Discipline in schools and tangible consequences would also be a viable tool. Given how many Children in America don’t have functioning home lives for one reason or another.
Reminds me of the saying, We have bad generals because they were promoted from bad colonels. (I never can spell that word that should be spelled Cornel. I have to sound it out like LeBeau from Hogans Heroes lol)
Not an easy word to spell in part due to its origins. The word was originally Italian and spelled colonello. But the French stole it and changed the spelling and pronunciation to coronel. Or Kernel when sounded out. The English then stole the word from the French.
But eventually changed the spelling back to something reflecting its Italian origin. Colonel.
While still keeping the French pronunciation. Because by the time they changed the spelling. The French pronunciation was widespread in the English Military and general population’s lexicon. So it seemed like too much effort to correct people thus they settled on a spelling change.
Yeah, and democrats water gardens with Gatorade.
Well it has electrolytes! They're what plants crave!
And fertilize them with the composted bodies of humans.
Well they can't read a fucking clock either
They'd make shitty fighter pilots.
1st pilot "Enemy at 4 o'clock!"
2nd pilot "That's in an hour!"
You don’t even need to learn to cook complicated stuff. Being Keto carnivore i’f just need to know how to cook eggs, steak, bacon, fish and i’m good. It’s so simple and easy.
I can cook some good dishes, within limits, but I have to follow precisely the receipt. What ever I cook will be as good as the receipt.
The BBC told us how spaghetti was harvested way back in 1957.
This should be compulsory viewing.