Agriculture

Klar: What makes Vermont special is farming

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A painting at the Vermont Welcome Center in Brattleboro. There is more farm art than farming in Vermont these days. It is as if the surreal has replaced the real; idyllic sentimentality has displaced the farming culture.

Preserving our AGRIculture

by John Klar

My family of numerous lineages have been farmers here in Vermont. My father’s mother grew up and worked hard on a dairy farm in Sheldon Falls. My mother grew up on the farm near where I now live — the Stoddard farm, which is one of the founding family farms here in Brookfield. My Mom’s mother, Cesarine Stoddard, was born an Alexander and raised on the Williamstown dairy farm where my cousin David Taylor still lives. Numerous family dairies — thousands, in fact — that were operating when I was a child in the 1960s are now long gone.

My great-great-great-great-grandfather, Solomon Stoddard, moved to Brookfield from New London, Connecticut, sometime around the year 1800. The family began as a sheep farm and later, like most Vermont farmers, shifted to dairy farming when the price of wool plummeted.

What sets Vermont apart from most parts of America today is that it was essentially an agrarian subsistence economy for centuries. People lived here to just get by, and live free. That’s why they came here to live. That’s why they stayed, for generations.

Increasingly, people have moved to Vermont to retire, or because they liked the scenery — but not to farm. This has changed the cultural and demographic of the state. But what has set Vermont apart is that it has held on to its agrarian culture and farmlands more than most parts of America. This is not really by choice — the state is dominated by rugged mountain ranges that separate communities, slow development, and make it unattractive for box stores, chains, or large factories to set up shop. Without those, the suburbia that has swallowed up farms across the nation never really infected the Green Mountain State.

This makes Vermont anachronistic. Vestiges of that fading culture of self-reliance, backwoods subsistence, and unpolished character live on in its mountain recesses, rough dirt roads, and many of its small towns. It may be that some look down derisively at these “backwards” natives, but they are unimpressed — they look back at the cellphone-dependent, soft-handed, Amazon-linked generation of “flatlanders” (meaning citified) and see a vulnerable, shallow uniformity and loss of collective knowledge that is its own form of backwardness.

As energy prices climb, processed foods and public water supplies become more toxified, and alienated people clustered in urban conformity seek escape, they will find that once farmlands convert to suburban lots and old barns rot to the ground, they never return. The knowledge of how to farm, fix equipment, store food, and tend to livestock is much like that dwindling farmland — it is not easily reclaimed. Every old farmer who passes on to the grave takes an inestimable and precious body of unique knowledge back into the dirt with her. It can not be dug up from the ground in need, or researched in a Google search.

One day, after Vermont has become the new Martha’s Vineyard escape for skiers, tourists, and wealthy retirees, and all the cows are gone and the fields regrown, people will reminisce about the farms and communities that preceded the art galleries, cannabis shops, and craft breweries that replaced them. Perhaps in that day, some will appreciate what was lost. Connecticut, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and most other states have long lost their farms and farmers, unlikely ever to return. Vermont’s biggest employer is the state government.

Vermont still has a few farmers left, and people should enjoy them while they struggle on for their last days. A few more years, and there won’t be many people to buy bales of hay from, or people who even know how to bale them.

Like dinosaurs, they are soon to be extinct.

The author is a Brookfield best-selling author, lawyer, farmer and pastor.


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Categories: Agriculture, Commentary

3 replies »

  1. Good article to highlight Vermont in the early productive years.
    Vermont had many great industries, Precision Vallye of many machine tool companies in the Springfield-Windsor areas. I graduated for SHS in 1957, Upon graduation in the Cooperative Machine course I received my Journeyman’s certificate from the state in the machine trade. No where else in the US did a student have such a rating upon graduation VT was at least 4 years ahead of the nation in alike endeavor. My training and engineering college has been used in my engineering business until retirement in 1999. SHS had great teachers and administration.

    Springfield had inventive people and held the most patents per capita in the US. People from in distances were employed. It was a huge industry. Other great industries were the Maple sugaring, Logging, Granite / Marble and certainly Dairy (Farms and Agriculture). Small hill town Newark VT in the good years had 27 dairy farms, no all gone. I worked summers in a few of them in my early years. A good life of hard work, lifting 90 Lb bales of hay in hot weather and putting them high up in barns. Hand milked many cows.

    Then along came Phil Hoff and the Interstates and the decline of Vermont life. There were many bumper stickers “Take Vermont Back”. Flatlanders that once disposed Vermonters as “Hicks” found VT and took over. A collage professor from NY settled into Newfane and wrote an article 8/21/2013 in the Brattleboro Commons “A Semi-Rural Economy Has Unique Needs- We do not have, nor can we have, an industrial economy”. AND “we need help to turn the economy around—Vermont need much more long term direct,concrete help for us to make progress economically. We cannot do it on our own”. That’s the attitude of Flatlanders that have moved here. I also reference the same attitude with Sen Baruth, another educator from NY. Flatlanders bought property cheaply when selling their expensive out-of-state properties. VT’ers have been forced to move.

    Industry has gone, state taken over by the liberal minds and you know the rest. Some commenters have mentioned that leaving VT was the best thing they did. I winter in Alabama, a great conservative state with many living benefits and very little snow. And if owing property and over 65, no property tax. They have record Boone & Crockett trophy deer here. So I escape VT when I can. Alabama is in a good location, I can in a day drive west of San Antonio, West of Oklahoma City, Tampa, and have driven to Baltimore, from the Pensacola FL area. And being in Al living costs are far cheaper. Getting away from VT has expanded my life.

  2. The mural should be adjusted to show a flatlander McMansion in the field along with a Mercedes Benz SUV. “Welcome to the real Vermont”.

  3. Klar: What makes Vermont special is farming,
    Well that was once true I can remember when Vermont had thousands of dairy farms, now we have a few hundred, Vermont farms were forced out from failing milk pricing being manipulated so, large farms out west had an in, Vermont with no help from our so-called elected officials, and then these failing farms sold off there properties to flatlanders from the cities, buying up Vermont…………………………….. what a shame !!

    Hey flatlanders, just because you have a few chickens running around or a few tomato plants, your no farmer…………….. Wake up people.