I am always amazed at our “way of life” here in LaGrange County, especially when I visit other communities or travel outside the state. Coming back home is like a fresh (albeit, sometimes smelly) breath of air. It’s a slower pace of life, and one that is captured by many beautiful scenes, but when I try to explain what makes it “home,” my answer (as with many others) is always the people. It’s the hardworking, willing-to-do-what-ever-it-takes people that have made LaGrange County great for many, many generations.
This month is commemorated as “National Farmers Month.” There is a lot that could be said about the farmers of LaGrange County, and the heritage in which they (quite literally) plant and harvest into our culture and community DNA. For this week’s edition, I had the sincere pleasure of spending an hour with one longtime LaGrange County farmer to hear his story, and learn more about agriculture here on a local level.
For someone like Ted Gunthorp, farming and agriculture aren’t just a job or a position; farming is a way of life. “You just got on the tractor [as a young boy], and that’s what you did,” Ted shared when I had the opportunity to sit down with him last week. Ted shared a lot about his upbringing, and how he experienced everything from raising hogs to learning how to chore and take care of work horses at the age of 8.
It was especially fascinating to hear Ted reminisce on the ebbs and flows of the agriculture industry in LaGrange County over the last 50 years. He recalled that mostly, his family was invested in the animal agriculture industry. “Everything we had was sold and walked off the farm,” he noted as he shared about raising hogs and other farm animals. In the 70’s, Ted shared that local meat processing saw a turn and there was a time where it wasn’t cost-effective to send in hogs to the butcher. He reflected with a chuckle, “I guess I just learned how to cut up that pig myself, and it ate the same way, whether it was [the butcher’s] cut or mine.”
Ted shared, “LaGrange County has always been a very diversified county [within agriculture]. It was a very poor county until irrigation came into being in the late 70s and early 80s.” I asked him about what this transformation looked like, and how it had an impact economically speaking. “It was basically a complete turnaround. The irrigation made it where they could finally get a crop [in the northern part of the county]. No crop, no money. The northern half of the county was basically all animal agriculture because of this.”
I think it is fair to say, having spent just an hour with Ted, that LaGrange County has seen decades of change and evolution within the agriculture scene. Being a generational farmer–raised by a farmer, and being one who has raised children and grandchildren who are farmers–the Gunthorps have experienced a couple of different recession periods, changes in the market, and have pivoted into different agricultural segments in order to sustain their farming business. Ted shared about finding a lot of times in which he was “mostly wearing out machinery and selling commodities.” It wasn’t always profitable.
Ted shared that he still uses a combine he’s been using for almost 30 years, the 9th of November commemorating the 30th year it's been in operation. So I posed the question: Why have you stayed in it for this long? Why do you still farm at the age of 83? “It's freedom,” he said. “It’s the freedom to do what I want, when I want.” While that was his first response, I also sat back and listened to him share about his mom and dad, and how they raised him on the farm. “Dad’s voice was always there saying, ‘When you need to do something, you just go out and do it.’” Ted’s heart and deep-rootedness in farming shone through, especially when he shared about his parents. Lessons that are generationally-ingrained into Gunthorp Farms derived from a very basic lesson on the homestead–if you don’t put in the work, then you lose the money you have in your crop or livestock. Chores must be done, crops must be harvested, work must be done.
When I asked him about this lesson being passed down organically through his family, Ted shared about the many experiences he had loading hay bales behind the baler which his mother would drive–perhaps one of my favorite stories he shared. “If I was goofing off back there, she was [so experienced at driving that tractor] that she would shift it into another gear without us even knowing, just to make sure I wasn’t goofing off anymore. My mom whipped me into shape, and she did a good job too.”
When asked about today’s agricultural landscape in LaGrange County, Ted lamented about the decreasing number of farmers in operation or being raised up into the agricultural industry. He shared about how hard farming can be, and how often farming must be diversified in order to survive. Folks aren’t knocking at the doors of realtors today, trying to buy up hundreds of acres of farmland to start a new agricultural business. So how do we sustain agriculture in our communities in today’s times? Ted shared, “You can have your little lot, you can have your chickens and a pig and whatever, and the kids have to learn to do the chores. If you get your livestock butchered at the right place, you can even have a decent piece of food. Probably the only way we can get common sense back into our world is by teaching the next generation these things.”
There is so much more I could add from my conversation with Ted Gunthorp. My favorite takeaway was hearing and seeing how Ted is a hardworking, longtime resident of LaGrange County who has made something for himself–a legacy which translates (and has translated) into generations of Gunthorps. He has invested decades of his life, alongside his “farmer’s wife” Georgetta, putting one step in front of the other, doing the chores, and teaching his children, grandchildren, and now great-grandchildren the value of hardwork through the industry of agriculture. While not every person and every reader of my column may be a farmer, there are opportunities available to all of us to invest in sustaining the longtime history of agriculture within our communities. To commemorate “National Farmers Month,” allow me to share a few opportunities you have to invest in and celebrate LaGrange County agriculture:
Ted is one of many “legacy farmers” in LaGrange County, and we are so fortunate to live in, do business in, and enjoy a county which is founded upon the lives and heritage of people like him and the Gunthorps. On behalf of the LaGrange County Chamber of Commerce, I’d like to extend my heartfelt thanks to Ted for sharing some of his story with me, and our readers. Today, consider investing into your story by rolling up your sleeves, getting involved, and learning more about our local agriculture industry. We are better because of LaGrange County ag. Happy National Farmers Month!
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