WV Farm Bureau Magazine February 2015 | Page 10

Young Farmer and Rancher Update Susan Wilkins, YF&R Chair This winter has been a busy one for the Young Farmers Committee. That’s especially exciting to me, as it feels like our committee is really beginning to grow. In January, Jeremy and Danielle Grant competed as West Virginia’s Excellence in Ag Award contestants at the National AFBF Convention. In February, four young farmers attended the Ag and Forestry Day at the Capitol. A week later, a large group of young farmers and women’s committee members attended the first ever FUSION Conference in Nashville, Tennessee. During the conference we were able to attend a variety of leadership development workshops specifically geared towards young farmers, participated in farm tours, and networked with other young people. We have plans coming up in March during National Ag Week for several of us to visit our local schools and read ag books to different classrooms to promote ag literacy. And we are already exploring ideas for our 2015 Annual Spring Farm Tour. We will be finalizing details soon and hope to have a date and location published in the March Farm Bureau magazine. I will be happy to see this winter come to an end and spring arrive once more. This year has definitely been a rollercoaster of extremes. After enjoying a balmy 55 degree Christmas, we were quickly forced to return 10 West Virginia Farm Bureau News to reality with a week of frigid temperatures and winds that ranged from -10 to +20, not including wind chills! I always dream of the day I might be able to be on the farm fulltime myself, but when I see my dad and my brother put in 12 hour days in below freezing temperatures, it makes me wonder if I’m not just a little crazy to want to give up my offfarm job where I can hibernate in my cozy office if it’s too cold to be outside! It is often hard for me to come to grips with why we have to face the snow and cold each year. But I love this passage from the 55th chapter of Isaiah: “The rain and snow come down from the heavens and stay on the ground to water the earth. They cause the grain to grow, producing seed for the farmers and bread for the hungry.” So, even in the snow and mud, God has a reason. And come March and April, the grass will seem that much greener.