Quite the shiny hunk of metal, isn't it........the drivers are very obsessive about keeping their trucks as sparkling clean as possible!
The same family has been hauling milk from this farm for 50 years.......making them like family to us! Several brothers own the milk route now, which was established by their dad many years ago. Whether there will be a third generation in their milk hauling dynasty remains to be seen........the brothers have been blessed with many daughters and only one son, who's now ten years old. So, only time will tell........I hope they don't put too much pressure on the poor kid!
Having a heavy truck drive into our farmyard on a regular basis puts much stress on our farm's driveway. Today, in fact, Husband had a dump truck deliver a load of crushed rock, which was spread on our long lane and in the area by the barn where the milk truck backs up next to the milkhouse porthole. In the rear of the truck's shiny tank is a long hose which is threaded through the porthole and attached to the bulk milk tank inside the milkhouse. The milk truck driver checks the milk level on measuring stick of the bulk tank in the milkhouse to determine the amount of milk which will be transferred to the truck. When the transfer is completed, the driver rinses out the bulk tank and turns on the automatic washer.
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While he waits for the milk to be pumped into the truck, Husband and/or I have the opportunity to visit with the driver and hear about the happenings in the brothers' families. The oldest driver is a new grandpa and he sometimes brings photos of grandbabies along to proudly show us. One of the brothers raises horses and likes to go on trailrides here in Iowa when the weather is good. Another brother has a Christmas tree farm business on the side and from him we hear about what's involved with that enterprise throughout the year.......its alot of work, and not just in December.
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Milk truck driving is not for slackers.......these guys get up at 3 a.m. each day to begin their milk routes. Their shiny, clean trucks don't get that way on their own........the drivers wash their trucks after each trip to the milk plant. Come heck or high water, milk must be picked up from the farms, and these drivers work on holidays just like the dairy farmers do. We appreciate their faithful service. Let's give a cheer for milk truck drivers everywhere!!
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Last week, I was endeavoring to use the Dr. Dictionary Word of the Day in each day's blog post. Hm-m........the past few days have been difficult because of words such as "excrescence"....... "obsequious"........ "xenophobia".........and today's word: "deux ex machina". Sheesh! The simple truth is, I haven't been determined enough to make the effort to think hard and figure out a way to use these words. I've been lazy; I'll try to do better.......tomorrow! Although......maybe this will work for today's word: Think hard so your mind can function as a "deux ex machina" when necessary!
9 comments:
Most interesting. I had forgotten how clean the milk trucks are!! That is incredible, especially considering the amount of miles these guys put on their trucks every day.
I grew up on a dairy farm, too. We were not a grade A operation since all our milk was placed in those old metal milk cans. You see them now sometimes in someone's yard filled with plants or something. We put the cans in a milk cooler filled with water.
I always remember that June is Dairy Month! We used to have a large banquet every June in Belmond, Iowa, for the Wright County Dairy Farmers Association. It was always a big crowd. Today I don't think there are hardly any dairy farmers left in Wright County.
I am so old fashioned that I still think the cows should be outside all the time unless they are in the barn being milked. But I know the current practice is to keep the cows inside, I think, all day long. As a child, my dog and I went into the pasture every afternoon and brought the cows back to the barn. We had a wooded area with a creek that stretched more than a mile beyond our house. Of course, the cows were usually a full mile away when it was time for me to get them! But it was a pleasant time.
Take care and keep on farming!!
Hi, Russell,
Thank you always for your thoughtful comments!
You have wonderful memories of a childhood on the farm! Yes, I have several old, rusty milk cans decorating my house and yard. What alot of work it must have been to use those! Looks like a backache to me.
Have a great day!
Russell,
I don't know if you'll get back here to read this, but I'm issuing you a blog challenge:
You have written several times of bringing the cows home from pasture when you were a kid.......that makes me think of a painting that hung in my grandma's house. It was by Paul Deflefson(sen?). It was a tranquil scene of a boy and a dog bringing the cows home. You post lovely art on your blog, so see if you can find this one!
I'm sorry.....the last name of the artist is DETLEFSON (or -sen).
LOL Jeannelle, Parker is a huge milk drinker, and very obsessive about it. I use lactose free, and he calls it franken milk and will not touch it. I have to search in the store for the milk dated the latest, and he will not touch one past it due date. Now I can tell him about how clean the milk trucks are kept! He remains fairly suspicious about those use by dates! lol...
deux ex machina
I think people will look at you funny if you try to slip the word deux ex machina
into your daily conversation...
But if that's not a deal breaker for you...good luck.
My husband used to say that the only person he knew who worked even more brutal hours than he did was his milk hauler. It's not for wimps.
Sherry,
Always glad to hear that people are milk drinkers.....even if its that weird lactose-free stuff!
For me personally, now that I'm so accustomed to the unpasteurized milk straight from the bulk tank, I can't stand to drink store-bought milk (unless its chocolate!). Years ago, though, I almost gagged on my first glass of unpasteurized milk.....its all in what you get used to.
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Mary,
I nearly split a gut over your comment. Glad you clued me in that probably no one will be impressed if I use "deux ex machina"!! Have you ever played "Balderdash"? Its good place to learn about strange, rarely-used words. That's one of our favorite family games.
Yeah, I really feel for the milk haulers during the bad weather days of winter.....they always have to be out on the roads, no matter what.
Wow, I wonder if they have a special machine for washing the outside of the truck. I didn't realize that they worked on holidays, etc!
Nice to see a small business doing well, good luck
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