Thursday, October 20, 2022

Farming Folklore and Supersitions for the October Newsletter

I've been trying to find barn folklore and superstitions. I know there must be some but I'm not turning up much beyond how and when to plant, and other things I've heard many times over. I hope to find something more interesting and newsworthy in time for the newsletter at the end of this month.

13 Farming Superstitions You Need to Know | Equipment Trader Blog

2. Don’t Mix Corpses & Crops
If you ever happen to use a backhoe or other piece of farming machinery to dig a grave, it should never again be used for your ag work. Operating equipment that’s been used to dig graves on your farm will plague your crops, causing them to rot. However, some say that the machinery can be used again if a priest blesses the equipment with holy water.

7. Keep Digging Tools Outside
Farmers will be the first to tell you that it’s bad luck to bring a shovel, hoe, or any other excavating equipment into the house. Keep those tools outside, or you may risk digging your own home into a hole of bad luck. 

From Icy Sedgwick (UK) What about brownies? Could you have a brownie in your barn? Seems like it could be a good thing...

Briggs described the brownies found in the Borders as being small men of around 3 ft in height, “dressed in brown clothes, with brown faces and shaggy heads” (1976: 45). They would do any work during the night that the servants hadn’t done. This might include reaping, threshing, herding sheep, and even running errands. Brownies might become attached to a family member. A bowl of cream or a good cake became their right in return (1976: 45).

An Urban Farm Designed To Make One Thing: A Grilled Ham And Cheese San

An Urban Farm Designed To Make One Thing: A Grilled Ham And Cheese San

This Dairy Farm Is Actually The Office Of A Thriving Health Care Tech

This Dairy Farm Is Actually The Office Of A Thriving Health Care Tech

At these new green cemeteries, your body will turn into a tree

At these new green cemeteries, your body will turn into a tree

Could a forest and green cemeteries be a solution, an alternative, to agri-tourism for Ontario farms? Would this be a way to get funding/ grants for keeping an old barn upright?

This Modular Urban Farm To Pop Up On Vacant Lots, And Then Move On

This Modular Urban Farm To Pop Up On Vacant Lots, And Then Move On

Death of a Family Farm

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Poop sensors, drones, and robots: Automation at the farm

Poop sensors, drones, and robots: Automation at the farm

Monday, October 10, 2022

Historic Sask. barn reopens after restoration | CBC News

Historic Sask. barn reopens after restoration | CBC News

Apple of your eye? Rundown birthplace of the McIntosh is for sale | CBC News

Apple of your eye? Rundown birthplace of the McIntosh is for sale | CBC News

Ottawa family brings NCC-owned pioneer farm back to life | CBC News

Ottawa family brings NCC-owned pioneer farm back to life | CBC News

Travel virtually through rural Ontario thanks to a new archive of incredible photos and stories | CBC News

Travel virtually through rural Ontario thanks to a new archive of incredible photos and stories | CBC News

Guelph researcher's farm diaries shed new light on rural Ontario life | CBC News

Guelph researcher's farm diaries shed new light on rural Ontario life | CBC News

The Farmerettes - Harrowsmith Magazine

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Reverence for Our Vanishing Rural Heritage - The Wayback Times

Reverence for Our Vanishing Rural Heritage - The Wayback Times

The Beautiful Old Barns of Ontario, Canada in the Winter

The Beautiful Old Barns of Ontario, Canada in the Winter