Rolling Acres of Urban Pasture

By G. September 16, 2021

From Junior Ganymede

https://www.jrganymede.com/2021/09/16/rolling-acres-of-urban-pasture/

There was a farmer with land that had been in the family for years and generations. Every day he walked the land with his boys. He checked on the pasture. He watched each one of his cattle. He knew them by name. He checked the brightness of their coat and the brightness of their eye, so he could tell if they were less than at their peak. He repaired fences. He drained wet spots and pulled noxious weeds. He tried slow and careful experiments here and there, introducing a new clover in one field, growing chestnuts in another with grazing in the understory.

But his fathers had created deep rich pasture so he was slow and careful to modernize too much on every whim of theory. He milked and drank the rich cream with his boys. He told them stories as they did their rounds. “This is where we went ice sliding the year the creek ran over. That dead stump there? That’s where Grandpa killed a bear. No, not the bearskin by the hearth, that’s a different bear.” He educated them that way, and by being with him as he did his work. They were also taught by the storms and the sun and the stars at night.

There was a lord with a small city that had been in the family for years and generations. Every day he walked the city with his boys. He checked on the roads. He smelled for sewer or pollution. He talked to the shopkeepers and police and families. He knew them by name. He knew their houses and their way of dress and could tell if they were less than at their peak. He would step in and direct traffic if he saw a snarl. If the kids at the school seemed restless and quarrelsome, he would declare a holiday and put on a parade. He found lifeless areas of empty buildings and rebuilt them for families and little shops and home industries.

He did experiments here and there. A neighborhood nuclear generator over here. A community managed homestead as the center of an HOA over here. But his fathers had built a happy and prosperous people so he was slow to modernize too much on every whim of theory. He collected his taxes and decorated his ancestral home with beautiful art made by his own people. He told his boys stories as they did their rounds. “This is where your great great grandfather–our founder– and his neighbors confronted a gang. This is where we had the wrestling exhibition when I was a young man and our city stood off every challenger.” He educated them that way, and by being with him as he did his work. They were also taught by the storms and the sun and the swirl of human life healthily lived around them. And even by the stars, because this was a town that cherished its darkness at night, and where everyone was safe even without lights.

In the words of Tom Russell – “think about it darlin’”.

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8 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
September 17, 2021 7:18 am

I thought you were writing about us.

This is the essence of what a real education is all about- the passing of information that has value, to the ones you love, with meaning.

And our cow is back with the herd, appreciate your counsel.

Thank you.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
September 17, 2021 7:52 am

And again: Be a loose cow, so that the lord of this story may be unsuccessful in farming his human cattle.

You don’t have to be a farmer to live the first half of the story with your family. Passing on your family’s history, values and wisdom can be accomplished in many different places and circumstances, on a sailboat, in an urban apartment, in an RV, etc. Be the author of your life.

Edward Brault
Edward Brault
September 17, 2021 8:54 am

Teach your children well…

Stucky
Stucky
September 17, 2021 9:17 am

Raise your hand if it felt like you were reading an article written by Hardscrabble Farmer.

Great stuff !!!

Ghost
Ghost
  Stucky
September 17, 2021 1:34 pm

When a summer storm rolls over the Mississippi alluvial plain, sweeping yesterday’s regrets into eternity’s dustbin, I cannot forgoe the Hallmark moment.

I see storm clouds. Others see glyphs.

pyrrhuis
pyrrhuis
September 17, 2021 9:59 am

And thus it was until evil men who wanted dominion over all the world enslaved the farmers and the villagers alike and forced their children to fight wars in distant places…

fujigm
fujigm
September 17, 2021 1:17 pm

Nice analogy comparing the average people to livestock, and government to a (benevolent) shepherd.
Take a step in time and the analogy still holds:
The cattle are eventually slaughtered by the farmer just as the average people are repetitively raped (and sometimes slaughtered) by the (less than benevolent) government.