Your reading list

Family farms give beyond themselves

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Published: December 23, 2010

, ,

Kathleen Skinner of Listowel, Ont., is the first winner of the inaugural Paul Beingessner award. To qualify for the award, she had to write an essay on the importance of family farms in Canada. This is an excerpt from her winning essay.

When my geography teacher posed a question along the lines of why should we work to preserve our local farms when there will always be other places to get our food from, I had to make an argument.

My one goal that day was to prove to my teacher, and others with a similar mindset, that family farms in rural communities are important.

Read Also

Robert Andjelic, who owns 248,000 acres of cropland in Canada, stands in a massive field of canola south of Whitewood, Sask. Andjelic doesn't believe that technical analysis is a useful tool for predicting farmland values | Robert Arnason photo

Land crash warning rejected

A technical analyst believes that Saskatchewan land values could be due for a correction, but land owners and FCC say supply/demand fundamentals drive land prices – not mathematical models

One factor that often set family farms ahead of other food producers is their care for the environment. Small farms are more likely to work at being stewards of the land, with a common goal of sustaining the land for future generations.

Farmers see their farm in a personal way, caring for it much like it was part of them. Family farms are closely connected with their communities and their neighbours. Consequently they are more inclined to use sustainable farming techniques that preserve resources and the health of the community.

On the flip side of this situation, industrial farms work to capitalize both cost and products. As a result, the environment can be left to deal with excessive chemical sprays, fumes or manure.…

Family farms provide work for people in the community, in addition to spending money back into the local economy.

I have watched my dad buy his feed from a local supplier, get his farm truck fixed by our neighbours and locate local repairmen. Just one farmer provides business for multiple enterprises; in essence, they are the heart of a rural community.

A large scale farm covering thousands of acres is another option for local food production, but very little money is put back into the local economy as a result of these farms employing few workers and purchasing their supplies from commercial sources.

The final option for food production is importing, which supports no local development or economy whatsoever. Thus, family farms are the most optimal food production source for our country….

The diminishing number of family farms is having a slow but obvious effect on the awareness of adults and children about the food they eat.

Years ago, a majority of people lived on farms or in a farming area. In modern days, however, the population balance has tipped to city dwellers. When looking at a dinner plate, one may not make the connection between that pork chop and the work that was put into it at the farm, and many don’t think that this connection is important.

However, consider the mentality of many people eating this food. A vast number

take the food they consume for granted. The supermarkets will always be stocked with every need.

Recently, I have met peers who seem to have no concept of where their food comes from. I was shocked to find out that a fellow teenager was clueless to the fact that turkey farms exist. Where did that drumstick come from?

The lack of connection between food and farm clouds respect for not only the farmers that produce the bounty, but the land that makes it all possible. …

Perhaps the most important aspect of family farming goes beyond the environment, supporting the local economy or enhancing knowledge about food. It is in the values learned by the family members themselves.

Take learning to work, for example. Occasionally, I look with envy at the town kids who have never experienced waking up at seven to get the chores done before church. However, this work has taught me discipline and I can look at how far my skills in the barn have come over the years. Each new duty I take on comes with a sense of accomplishment.

I have learned to work as a team member, to do my part so the family succeeds. I have learned patience when tempers start to flare over stubborn animals that will not move. I have learned to pitch in and help when another family member is sick.

Working on my family farm has taught me that everything we do is important to the function of the business as a whole. And, hopefully, when all play their part, there is success at the end to enjoy.

To sum it all up, skills and values learned on the family farm are unquantifiable and these farms give beyond themselves to the environment, the economy and in education. What better model is there for successful agriculture in Canada?

About the author

Kathleen Skinner

Freelance Contributor

explore

Stories from our other publications