Monday, March 11, 2013

'Just' a farm kid is a job prospect extraordinaire...

I came across this on my lunch break today... I'm not going to give a lengthy commentary. I think author, Rudy Taylor, does a perfect job that needs no further explanation.

A great article that appeared in a rural Kansas newspaper has been getting national attention. It's all about how being a farm kid is not something to apologize for--it's a resume all on its own. And it related to me, a small town farm girl... I just couldn't not share it. Enjoy:
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‘Just’ a farm kid is a job prospect extraordinaire

By: Rudy Taylor
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While attending a job fair last week where Taylor Newspapers manned a booth, I met lots of job seekers. Some brought resumes. Others just moseyed by, picked up the free stuff on our table and asked a few questions. But one young woman created a memory for me.

She was a senior in high school, seeking summer employment before starting to a community college in the fall.

“Are you hiring?” she asked.

We said probably not, but we’re always looking for good resources, such as part-time 
photographers and writers. “We’d be happy to take your resume,” I told her. Then she said something that stuck with me.

“I’m afraid my resume wouldn’t be too impressive,” she said. “I’ve spent all my life working on my parents’ farm. I go to school in the daytime and do chores morning and night.”

Whoa.

I told her to go home and create a resume, and write down exactly what she had told me.
As a farm girl, one who has driven a tractor since she was 12, one who has cleaned out barns, scooped grain until her back ached, fed chickens, pigs, cattle and goats --- this girl knows the meaning of work.

She knows about dependability and getting jobs done on time. The morning school bus won’t wait until a farm kid finishes those chores. They’ll be done on time or the young student will miss that all-important ride.

A young person who has put up hay, helped her dad and mother in the farrowing house or candled eggs has something more than words to jot on a resume.

Farm kids don’t need to take art appreciation classes in school. They witness picturesque landscapes, sunrises and changes in seasons as they grow up.

They ride horses, drive four-wheelers and neatly stack big bales at the edge of meadows. They fish in their ponds, learn to handle firearms and shoot deer, rabbits and turkeys. They work as a family in the garden, raising, harvesting and canning their own vegetables. 

Farm kids learn to keep good records on their livestock. When they raise and sell a 4-H calf, they can calculate the profit gained after deducting feed, vet medicines and other costs. They typically know how to stand on their own two feet and give project talks, or give oral reasons for judging a class of lambs or swine. Many of them earn leadership roles in church, 4-H or FFA, so they can moderate a meeting to perfection using Roberts Rules of Order. 

They learn early in life the tactics of conservation --- how to keep topsoil from washing into Oklahoma; how to plant wind barriers and how to recognize grass-cheating weeds that need sprayed. 

Any farm kid can handle a paint brush, spade a garden, pull worms from tomato plants, gather hen eggs, mow grass, groom animals and take one grain of wheat, bite down on it and determine if it’s time to start the combine. 

And, this girl thinks her resume might be lackluster? ------- Oh, I don’t think so.

Put her to work in a hardware store, newspaper office or grocery store, and she will enter the front door looking for things to do.

It’s that way with kids who grow up as farm and ranch kids.

Their resume is written on their foreheads and in their hearts.

They should never apologize.

NEVER


- Randy Taylor is publisher of three weekly newspapers in southeast Kansas. He also takes pride in being a young farmer during his teenage years and a proud member of FFA.

This article was originally printed in the Montgomery County Chronicle, Thursday February, 21, 2013. 

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Jump on the Wagon with Me: Facebook Isn't Just for Posting Status Updates Anymore!

So lately I've been using social media a lot. If you read back to my first blog post, my first and foremost goal with this blog was to bridge the gap between the city and the farm and learning more about myself and doing so with any tools I came across.

I'm on Facebook, I've self-taught myself with a few different web programs, I'm pretty familiar with the Adobe Creative Suite, I'm on Twitter, I'm on LinkedIn, still want to get better with YouTube, and as soon as I save up my pennies for a new phone, I'll be an Instagramer as well... 

I have found that they're all great tool for sharing information and it seems to be the more, the better. Some may wonder well what are smart phones doing in farmers pockets, or what is GPS doing in tractors or sprayers, or why would a food packaging or processing facility need to enlist the services of a graphic designer? It's the 21st century and everything is changing so quickly. My take on it is that social media is mostly free and its becoming the forefront of news sharing, so why not jump on the Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, YouTube, and LinkedIn bandwagon? It's win-win. 

I'm staying with the times, while showing everyone around me I'm staying with the times, and staying with the times of what everyone is sharing. It's a full circle and if I use it correctly, I can be a sponge and just keep learning and I can help others become sponges by sharing what I've learned. Twitter is my newspaper in the morning, Facebook is an instantaneous website, and YouTube is a way to share with the more visual learner. So yes, all of the above belongs in the agriculture industry. It's one of the quickest, and most cost effective ways to help bridge the gap between the city and the farm. 

And to finish this night time blog post... with more and more people becoming closer to FOUR generations removed from the family farm, there's no better time than the present to capitalize on this viral sharing bandwagon.

Jump on the wagon with me!

Thursday, January 3, 2013

It's Not What You Know, But Who You Know: The Journey of a Lifetime

I have found that, sometimes, you just need to sit down for a couple of minutes and think. I'm not talking daydreaming or thinking about how you are going to make next month's car payment or even thinking about what you want to have for supper or what you want to plan for your weekend. No, you need to think about your goals and your happiness. After all, you'll never work a day in your life if you love your job.

And thinking is what I have been doing for the past couple of months. And it's what I'm doing right now as I type. I'm 24, and I'm happy. The holidays are coming to an end, and I finally have time to take a deep breath.  Yes, there are other things I could be doing and probably should be doing rather than writing this blog post, but that's okay.

This past year, I have made a lot of decisions for myself. Don't get me wrong, faith is still an integral part of my life and always will be. I love my God and Creator. But sometimes you just need to look at the big picture and trust God's plans for you, even if others don't agree with you. All that matters in the end, is you and God. So with that in mind, I am happy, I feel blessed, and I hope and pray that all those I hold near and dear to my heart can see what I see.

One of those decisions was to work on my career. I sent in my resume and accompanying cover letter to countless agribusinesses hoping to land an interview if not a job. There's one thing you all have got to understand. I grew up on a farm, loved it, grew up with a veterinarian grandpa, loved it, and came back after college to help our the family businesses. That's where the issues began for me. I love helping my family, but there were no boundaries, no lines. The sayings about working for family are all true, trust me. So I spread my wings and crossed my fingers. After countless interviews, emails, and prayers, I finally got a break. Good things come to those who wait. Gumz Farms, LLC gave me that break. I started the week before Christmas part time so that I could transition from Gomers Inc., and help a new potential hiree. I'll eventually become full time to get off on my own and keep my family my family and my job my job. So far so good.

You may be wondering how the blog title has anything to do with this post. Well, that's a good question. Long story short, I got the job just a few months after my sister made me join a crossfit workout group, emphasis on made me. Never would have met my (so far) awesome new boss or family if I hadn't stepped my foot in the door for that first workout just last August. So, always keep your eyes and ears open. You never know who you'll meet or how they'll fit into your life in the future.

Enough thinking for now... I've got to get back to work, which isn't even work (most days). Have a good one!