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Every farm is a story, but rarely is the story told as it is here with such depth, honesty, emotion, and inspiration. Presented here is the remarkable journey of the Cates Family Farm and the people who have learned through the lessons of experience to live in harmony with their landscape and in gratitude for the gifts it brings.
Through three generations (and with young great-grandchildren, a rising fourth), family members have transitioned from seeing themselves simply as “owners” of a farm to instead becoming caretakers of the land and water where they live and work. They have moved from a commodity-oriented mindset to an understanding that the pastures, fields, streams, forests, and the many species, both domestic and wild, that inhabit this landscape are, in reality, a community, not simply a commodity.
This book gives a comprehensive look at the prehistory, history, and present use of this particular piece of land and the peoples and species that have lived here and continue to do so.
The story of the Cates Family Farm can serve as a paradigm for those with an interest in a more restorative, regenerative, perennialized agriculture and an ethical relationship with “place.” It illustrates the movement away from industrialized, chemically dependent, minimally diversified farming to one that more closely mimics nature’s wisdom—an approach to a viable farm business that honors the legacies of the past inhabitants of the landscape and looks ahead to the health and well-being of the generations to come. It is a story of long and hard work, as well as listening. It is the story of a journey toward a land ethic, gratitude, and hope.
—Don Greenwood, former chair, Lower Wisconsin Riverway Board;
retired editor, weekly Home News, Spring Green, Wisconsin, Driftless Area
About the Author:
Richard (Dick) and his wife, Kim, co-own the Cates Family Farm LLC in Wyoming Township, Iowa County, with their son Eric and his wife, Kiley, and their daughter Shannon and her husband, Dan. Dick is a life-long farmer who grew up working on his family's beef cow-calf farm, a neighbor's dairy farm, Montana ranches, and in large-scale dairy forage and grain crop production overseas.Dick pursued professional studies in soil science and agronomy and earned an MS (1979) in soils from Montana State University and a PhD (1983) in soils and plant health from the University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Agricultural and Life Sciences while serving a Leopold Fellowship. Dick began taking over the family farm management in 1987 and then, along with Kim, purchased a portion of the land to build their own farming business.For the next eight years, Dick helped (part time) lead the development and oversight of the Wisconsin Sustainable Agriculture Program, an on-farm demonstration and research effort of the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection with the purpose of reducing agriculture's dependence on non-renewable petroleum-based inputs. In 1995 Dick was given the opportunity (part time) to develop and direct the Wisconsin School for Beginning Dairy and Livestock Farmers, a program at UW-Madison to train new would-be farmers in business planning and managed grazing. Dick retired from this work in 2018, but over those twenty-three years, he also developed and taught courses within the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences there. Dick and his family are members of the Iowa County Uplands Farmer-Led Watershed Project and the Lowery Creek Watershed Initiative, where they share information about and demonstrate conservation practices with other landowners and the public. The Cates family has been recognized for their soil and water conservation work: 1998 Wisconsin Soil and Water Conservation Achievement Award, Soil and Water Conservation Society of America; 1999 and 2018 Water Quality Leadership Award, Iowa County Land Conservation; 2000 Distinguished Agricultural Award, Kiwanis Club of Downtown Madison; 2006 certification by the Animal Welfare Institute, the first beef farm in the United States to receive this certification; 2009 Wisconsin Grazing Community Communicator of the Year; 2012 UW-Madison Farm and Industry Short Course Alumni Service to Agriculture; 2016 Blue Mounds Area Project Bur Oak Award; 2016 Wisconsin Master Agriculturist; and 2020 Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation Distinguished Service to WI Agriculture Award. In their words, the most cherished recognition was receiving the 2013 Sand County Foundation Wisconsin Leopold Conservation Award.Dick authored the book Voices from the Heart of the Land: Rural Stories That Inspire Community (University of Wisconsin Press, 2008) and a children's book, An Adventure on Sterna's Hill (2019).Dick and Kim enjoy walking on the farm and in wild country anywhere, canoeing, skiing, and dancing together. They have four grandchildren who are the love and joy of their lives.
Title: A Creek Runs Through This Driftless Land: A ...
Publisher: Little Creek Press
Publication Date: 2024
Binding: Soft cover
Condition: As New