A day in the hay
- Share via
Andrew Glazer
FAIRGROUNDS--Some knelt right down, clutched the rubbery udder and
squeezed a shot of milk out. Others--the squeamish ones--pulled, pinched
and tugged delicately, but to no avail.
Camilla, a patient Holstein, stood indifferently, only occasionally
swatting the young, aspiring dairy farmers with her wiry tail.
“That’s nature folks,” said Kia Smallcomb, teacher for the group of
fifth-graders, as Camilla took a brief bathroom break, causing spectators
to scatter. “Just try to enjoy the moment.”
They were participating in the Agademics program--a workshop at
Centennial Farm allowing children more familiar with concrete and
cul-de-sacs at least one day to play in the hay.
Students in the program learn to churn butter, milk cows and plant
vegetables. The girls and boys from Carden Academy of Basic Education in
Mission Viejo wore their uniforms of red kilts and navy shorts.
“This is really fun at first, but I don’t think I could do it for a
living every day,” said Justin Yang, 12, after scraping a ditch in the
dirt where he and his class would plant Cherry Ball radishes. “I think
your hands would get very blistered.”
Jennifer Withrow, the program’s organizer, admits that knowing how to
milk a cow might not be a practical skill for most Orange County
children.
“But I think it’s important people know where their food comes from,”
she said, washing celery, carrots and radishes that she had just pulled
from the farm’s soil. “Plus it’s good that they know the difference
between a ram and a lamb, a boar and a sow, a dairy cow and a meat cow.”
“I think they’ll have a better respect for full-time farmers,”
Smallcomb said. “I’ve taught them this is a way of life for some people,
but a means of life for others.”
Brooke Severns, whose blond ponytail swung while she talked, said her
one-day experience helped her better understand her father, who grew up
on several farms.
“This is what he did all day,” said Brooke, who at home grows parsley,
basil, tomatoes and cilantro. “Maybe this is something I’d like to do
when I get older.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.