Monday, November 25, 2013

Things I’ve Learned at The Ranch



In my 40-year association with the family that operates the Canyon Creek Ranch, I have learned a number of invaluable lessons. For one, this suburban kid can buck a bale, pluck a chicken and chop a pile of wood. Also, I never would have learned the true meaning of hamburger without the experience of hanging around ranchers through the cycle of their year.



Yet the most essential teachings have come from the core values of everyday life on the ranch, which can be heard again and again, especially between grandparents and their grandchildren. These truths arent just for children. In fact, they have lasting meaning for all of us, regardless of age or locale.




Lesson 1: Put things back where you found them



The Ten Commandments conclude with Thou shalt not covet. It assumes that human trait that sees what another has with envy, if not lust.



On a ranch, it is essential that one shares what one possesses when appropriate. This is how tools are tested and improved and how young ones learn to use them. Neighbors will run out of essential supplies and share equipment when it is cost effective. One of the key rules of such an exchange is the agreement to return the property back to the place it belongs. If you can't find the shovel when a fire breaks out, or the bucket for the table scraps to feed the chickens, or your cell phone when the baby is about to be born well, on a ranch, things have a place in relation to their function.



Respecting anothers property, its place and function, and returning it to its owner is the opposite of coveting, because when you put things back where you found them, you honor the person and the relationship, and your own integrity in the process.



Isnt that true for relationships as well as things?

 


Lesson 2: Clean up your mess



Its difficult to learn anything on a ranch without making a mess, especially the first time you try it. Thats true of baking a pie, chopping wood, stacking hay, or putting a horse away after a day of riding. My experience on a ranch has taught me that there is a lot of patience and grace when it comes to mess and mistakes.



What isnt tolerated, from the get-go, is walking away from your mess and expecting someone else to clean it up. Taking responsibility for your actions is an essential part of learning and an essential measure of human maturity.



How many relationships could be saved, how many careers advanced, how many sleepless nights avoided if we simply found the conviction to clean up our own messes? Jesus said, First take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbors eye (Matthew 7:5).



The only harm in making a mess is running away from it.




Lesson 3: There is no shame in asking for help



The ranch owner I worked for 40 years ago taught me a very important lesson one day. We were about to work calves, which means corral the herd, separate the calves from their mothers (no easy task, one that requires skilled riders!), rope the calves, and throw them to the ground for a team to brand, castrate, and de-horn the males and give various immunization injections. It is quite a process!



Well, this city boy had seen plenty of cowboy movies and TV shows growing up, so when it was my turn, I picked up some rope to try my hand at lassoing a calf. The owner watched in silence as this tender foot twirled the rope over his head and successfully lassoed a calf about 15 feet away. Holding the rope directly in front of me, the 200 lb. calf broke for its mother across the corral. The resulting rope burn through my palms was with me for about a week!



The ranch owner broke out laughing. After the calf was released, he took the rope from me and showed me the correct way to rope a calf: once the calf is lassoed, the cowboy wraps the loose rope around his back, leaning with all of his weight to stop the surging animal in its tracks. A cowboy would also never work calves without gloves on!



The ranch owner handed me back the rope and, as he walked away, said, There is no shame in asking for help.



Isnt that true in any aspect of our lives?





Lesson 4: Everybody pitches in



Ranchers are required to know accounting, tax and environmental law, veterinary medicine, automobile mechanics, land management, building codes, and plumbing and electrical contracting, to say nothing about the domestic arts of cooking and preserving food. That list doesnt even begin to cover all that needs to be done on a working ranch. It is essential then that anyone on it, regardless of age, pitches in whenever and wherever appropriate. If you havent cooked the meal, you help clean up. When it is time to move the herd, there is a role for everyone, from opening gates to driving the cows with your horse. If all your skill level can handle is feeding the chickens, then your contribution is expected and very much welcomed. Everybody pitches in to make the ranch work.



In modern families, how often do we find children treated as the audience, spectators to what it takes to run a family? We see this passive entitlement in the workplace, at school, and very much in the church. We count on others to contribute to the success of the whole while we limit our interests and activities to personal preferences. In our hectic and privileged culture, we grow entitled to self-interest, expecting someone else to make the mission of the larger system work. We see this especially in our voting patterns in the U.S., where rarely do even half of eligible voters turn out for elections. We see this in churches and other nonprofit service organizations where it is expected that 20 percent of the active members will fund 80 percent of the operations of the institution.



On a ranch, everybody pitches in. Everyone invests in the success and mission of the whole. In so doing, each individual makes a unique contribution and reaps the benefits of success or is there to share the burden of failure. One way or the other, the sense of purpose and belonging lasts a lifetime. It may also be what we in suburbia so desperately seek.



Lesson 5: Please and thank you



Teaching conventional manners varies from culture to culture. It is a universal responsibility for parents and community elders to equip their children with these essential tools for positive relationships. Saying please when making a request and thank you upon receiving are found in most languages and come with a myriad of associated expressions.



On the ranch, please and thank you define required behavior for all ages and statuses. Expressing respect and gratitude is more than quaint ritual. Honor and courtesy acknowledge another's humanity in a relationship exchange.



This value of respect and gratitude is also applied to the earth and its cycles. Rather than exploiting the land, as is often the assumption of those foreign to farming, this ranching family lives as part of the ecology and its needs. For example, this family recycled plastics, metals, and glass for decades before it became municipal law. Their use of pesticides, insecticides, and fertilizers as well as their care for the livestock have been done with a commitment to ecological responsibility long before that was in fashion. Members of this family serve on regional commissions overseeing the sustainability of water, grassland, wildlife habitat, and forest. Not all farming operations share such values, but many do. Folks like these respect the earth, honor what it shares with them, and are grateful to be a part of it.



Please and thank you arent just about getting along with others. Such values can frame how we live on this planet.



Conclusion:

As a visitor to ranch life and culture, I romanticize much of what I observe. Yet its not so much that I ignore how difficult, stressful, and risky such work can be for those who grow our food. I have learned much in association with my surrogate family at Canyon Creek Ranch and am beyond grateful for their hospitality and graciousness. Above all, they have exhibited values that make anyones life more rich and real.