Showing posts with label magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Thanks Progressive Dairy Magazine

 I'm at it again! 

Progressive Dairy Magazine has again asked me to be a guest writer for their website and their national magazine. I gladly accepted the invitation to write for the June issue for National Dairy Month. It's a letter to my fellow dairy farmers, but even if you are not a farmer, I think you will enjoy it.

We Are Not Just Farmers

When I was a child, other kids would ask, “What does your dad do?” I would rather humbly reply: “He’s just a farmer.” I don’t know why I added the “just” in that reply. Actually, yes I do.

I was just being a silly kid with silly kid thoughts. He was just a farmer because he didn’t wear a suit and tie to work. He was just a farmer because I didn’t think he had an important job like the other kids’ dads. As a kid, I didn’t get it.

That was a long time ago, and my thoughts on the importance of being a farmer have changed dramatically. My dad got to just do the job he loved, every day. My dad got to just help feed people. My dad got to just be a great example of what a proud, hardworking, caring farmer looks like, and I have the honor of calling myself a farmer too.

Fortunately, that opinion of farmers is changing with the non-farming community too. My dad, my family and farmers like us are never just farmers.

I was recently asked to speak at a Science Museum Gala. When I began by saying my family and I are dairy farmers, the audience cheered and applauded. Why is this perception of farming changing? There are many reasons, but you and I can take much of the credit. I know you have heard this many times, “People want to know where their food comes from.” We are being transparent. We are telling our stories.

So how are you celebrating June Dairy Month? How are you opening that window to begin conversations? Here’s a few things my family does to share our story.

What could be a more perfect pairing than cookies and milk? In honor of June Dairy Month, Bremer Farms serves homemade cookies with milk to our church friends after the Sunday services on the first Sunday of June. This has become an annual tradition and a fun way to start conversations about dairy.

It’s the last day of school, and we show our appreciation to our teachers and staff by treating them to an ice cream treat on that final day of the school year. I contact the school principal to arrange a convenient time, and we roll in with coolers full of ice cream. Each June, my family chooses a different school within our hometown.

Soccer, anyone? Our church organizes a youth soccer camp each June, and what better way to quench the thirst of the athletes than providing chocolate milk and yogurt, too.

But sharing our dairy story doesn’t have to cost us any money either.

I love to read, and my family has spent hours and hours at our local library. After contacting our children’s librarian at our public library, I am now an annual guest at Storytime With a Farmer. I bring my bag of farm props along with a few of my favorite cow books – and as I read, I pause frequently to pull another “prop” from my bag to share about our farm. Thanks to our checkoff, everyone goes home with a cow hat and a coloring book, too.

Are you on social media? Me too! My family and I are always posting pictures of the day-to-day goings-on from our farm. Our YouTube channel has over a hundred farm-related children’s storytimes to watch, and many include photos and videos from around our farm too.

I sound like I’m bragging about what we do, and that is definitely not my intention. I hope you can see that it’s easy to open the window to share our dairy story because we love what we do, and there are so many opportunities to do so. After all, we are not just farmers. We are proud, hardworking, caring farmers who still have a few people to remind of that.  end mark



Thursday, July 2, 2020

Ugly Wrapping Paper Reveals Story Time is a Blessing

"Sometimes blessings come in ugly wrapping paper." - Robbie Norton

If you are an avid follower of My Barnyard View on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest or this blog, you know that I have been reading a lot lately! I've been reading five books a week, for months! I may not be narrowing down my must-reads from the New York Times best sellers list, but I've read some great books. I've also been doing some writing, but I'll get to that in a moment.


I have been sharing a new book each day, Monday through Friday since the pandemic began in March. With daughter Sara's help, the day's story is followed up with a kids cooking class, a craft, a drawing lesson, or a field trip around our farm. We have toured the calf barn, our fields during planting and baling, our irrigator, and lots more. We even had a visit from a dinosaur!


 It has really given Sara and I a fun project. Hopefully our followers find it meaningful and also fun. If you haven't stumbled upon it yet, you can see all of them on my YouTube channel or the Story Time tab on this blog. We are fast approaching 100 episodes of story time. That's 100 books read!

So when Progressive Dairy asked me to again write for their magazine and website, I gladly wrote about story time. You can read "Story Time is a Blessing" by clicking here.


I've written for Progressive Dairy several times in the past five years.
For your reading pleasure.... ;) here are a few.












Thursday, February 15, 2018

Writing About Dairy: Moos and News

I love to write. Throughout grade school and middle school, when writing a story was our assignment, I was the kid that smiled from ear to ear. High school and college writing assignments sent up a silent cheer inside me. When Progressive Dairyman Magazine  asked me to submit articles for their magazine, there was no holding me back. I have been writing for their publications for nearly four years now. Today I thought I would share the two most recent submissions.


My articles appear in the Progressive Dairyman magazine as well as on their website.  Click on the title below to read the article.




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Wishing you a "well-written" kind of day!