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Forty-six years of pretty straight going : the life of a family dairy farm : the Wyman Farm, Weybridge, Vermont / George Bellerose.

By: Bellerose, George.
Contributor(s): Vermont Folklife Center.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Middlebury, Vt. : Vermont Folklife Center, c2010Description: 233 p. : ill. ; 22 x 26 cm.ISBN: 9780692004333; 0692004335.Other title: Wyman Farm, Weybridge, Vermont.Subject(s): Bellerose, George -- Childhood and youth | Bellerose, George -- Family | Wyman Farm (Weybridge, Vt.) -- History | Farm life -- Vermont -- Weybridge -- History | Dairy farms -- Vermont -- Weybridge -- History | Family farms -- Vermont -- Weybridge -- History | Farmers -- Vermont -- Biography | Weybridge (Vt.) -- Social life and customs | Weybridge (Vt.) -- History, LocalSummary: In 1790, about 90% of Vermonters lived on and earned at least part of their livelihood from farming. In 2009, about 1% of the state's population lived on Vermont's 1,050 dairy farms. As historians have noted, America was born in the country and has moved to the city. By our breakfast, dairy farmers have put in half a day's work. By noon, many have logged an eight-hour day. By nightfall, they have often added another eight-hour day. Given the long hours, the toll on the body, and the scant economic returns, why would anyone want to be a family farmer today? Forty-Six Years, in documenting the farming lives of Larry and Grayson Wyman and their Weybridge farm, addresses that question. Farming, the Wymans would answer, is for those who value the rhythm and routine of the seasons and the diversity of each day's challenges, for those who accept that farming is a difficult way to make a living but steadfastly believe that it can be a fulfilling way of life. -- taken from back cover.
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Books Books American Center for Mongolian Studies
S521.5 V5 B4 2010 (Browse shelf) 1 Available 12259

Includes bibliographical references (p. 221-222).

In 1790, about 90% of Vermonters lived on and earned at least part of their livelihood from farming. In 2009, about 1% of the state's population lived on Vermont's 1,050 dairy farms. As historians have noted, America was born in the country and has moved to the city. By our breakfast, dairy farmers have put in half a day's work. By noon, many have logged an eight-hour day. By nightfall, they have often added another eight-hour day. Given the long hours, the toll on the body, and the scant economic returns, why would anyone want to be a family farmer today? Forty-Six Years, in documenting the farming lives of Larry and Grayson Wyman and their Weybridge farm, addresses that question. Farming, the Wymans would answer, is for those who value the rhythm and routine of the seasons and the diversity of each day's challenges, for those who accept that farming is a difficult way to make a living but steadfastly believe that it can be a fulfilling way of life. -- taken from back cover.

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