The Farm Store is open Friday and Saturday (Dec 27 and 28) The Store is closing forever on Dec 28th. You can still get grassfed beef from Potter Farm in Gilmanton by the half.

My Therapist Is a Big Ox; Who's Yours?

written by

Carole Soule

posted on

March 29, 2021

Carole invites you to the Miles Smith Farm Eater Celebration on SATURDAY, April 3. It costs $60 (all-inclusive.) Reservations are required and can be made here. Proceeds go to building the Learning Barn

Is your spouse ignoring you? Kids tuning you out? Sick of a year of pandemic isolation? For some people, living in semi-quarantine is a burden; for me, it's an excuse for spending more time on the farm.

 My bubble includes a herd of cattle and other animals who have helped keep me sane. The bubble also includes my farm, which is my happy place. Most farmers love their farms. Why else would we go deep into debt to buy cattle that need to be fed and/or milked twice a day and endure all the hardships and inconveniences that we love to complain about? But assuming air travel was Covid-safe, and that husband Bruce and I had money for travel, where would we go to spend it? Paris? Thailand? They'd never let my "therapy animals" onto the plane. 

So we stay home. And when I'm sick of paying bills, my first thought is to go to the pasture and visit Topper. He's a 1,500-pound Scottish Highlander ox who will walk up to me and rest his shaggy head on my shoulder while I scratch his neck. Born on the farm nine years ago, Topper and his new partner, Finn, are a team. I put a yoke on them, and with a goad stick and my voice, they do what I ask. Sometimes I don't even have to ask. (Cattle can read minds.) Working my oxen is my idea of fun, and it's unimpeded by the pandemic, just as petting our animals is my idea of comfort.

 Do you want to try the "cow-cuddling cure"? Do you want to feel the soft breathing of a cow, look into those big brown eyes, smell a cow's sweet breath, and feel the warmth of that big body (101.5 degrees)? You can, on Saturday, April 3, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sometimes the untimely arrival of manure can break the spell, but it's nothing among friends. It's all part of the earthy package that is available for a single fee. You and seven friends or family (eight total) can spend an hour petting, scratching, and even sitting on a steer (if you are under 130 pounds) for the Miles Smith Farm Easter Celebration—on Saturday, not Sunday.

 Cow-cuddling not only makes me feel better, it reminds me that I'm doing what I love: farming. But I'm willing to share. It costs $60 and reservations are required and can be made here. Proceeds go to building the Learning Barn, where humane methods of raising livestock will be offered for adults and children.

 Stress will always be with us, but farms – with their rolling pastures, their lazily grazing livestock, and their harmonious blending of nature and industry – are here to feed your body and soul. Whether you are visiting the animals, buying local products from our solar store, or simply enjoying the view, we are here for you.

Carole invites you to the Miles Smith Farm Eater Celebration on SATURDAY, April 3. It costs $60 (all-inclusive.) Reservations are required and can be made here. Proceeds go to building the Learning Barn.

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Training Dogs is Now My Super Power.

In the spring, I fostered an extremely reactive 9-year-old pitbull, Cody, who wanted to kill my calves and regularly chomped on my other dog, Flora. He was so dangerous I made an appointment to euthanize him. I didn't follow through, and today, he is calm and balanced and has learned to ignore my cattle and Flora. The other day, under my supervision, he licked the face of a friendly calf. Cody is learning new behaviors daily, proving you CAN teach an old dog new tricks.