!4-Lancaster Farming, Sati B‘ On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) Joyce Bupp We’re getting antsy. Maybe that’s because winter has seemed so long and intense this year. There’s been ice cover on our ponds since late November. That’s almost unprecedented. Snow has covered the fields and farm off and on for many weeks, nearly melting away com pletely some time ago, then get ting a repeat layer of ice slicks and white piles of fluff. That’s actually been beneficial, provid ing an insulating coverlet blanket to fields and plants against freeze-drying winds and root heaving cold. So when I walked into the house after milking one recent evening, and realized that, even in the unlit house, it was still light enough to see objects, I felt some silent, inner rejoicing. When daylight is stretching to that length, we can be sure that winter’s back while not quite broken is at least wearing out. And with the impatience of the family 5-year-old, I, too, am wondering when the grass will turn green again. On closer examination, a little of it already is. At sheltered spots around the yard, protected by buildings or slopes, tiny, perky shoots are pushing up from clus ters of dried and matted grass residue. On a few south-facing corners of the flower beds, daffo dil bulbs have poked their dur able noses out from under the leaf-mulch covers. And a neigh bor’s willow trees are already turning that tantalizing soft-gold shade of imminent leaf-out. Still, if there was a shred of doubt that winter harsh edge is being worn down, it was dispelled by the annual return of some special outside visitors. Their reassuring calls coincided with a morning of warming temperatures last week, on a day hinting more of late March than mid-February. Pushing bales down through the hay-drop to the heifer pens be neath, 1 fled that job at first sound of the over head calls to dash out side. Two dozen Canada geese were winging overhead, honking with what sounded like the sheer joy of being alive. And headed north, Make Those Rodent Tracks ERR! \ DHvae Tracking Powder* * Kills Rats & Mice • -S r J 6 lb. Bucket (%|?549.95 + $6.00 Shipping \ Slain Supply • Rt 1 Box 11TH Blam PA 17006', ■briia"' 17, 2001 Moments later, I spotted more in the meadow below the house, some poking around residue on the cornfield, others rooting through grassy spots melting out from snowcover around the ponds. And one pair was stand ing in the middle of the big pond, at the spot where the nesting “is land” is normally located. Or was before it broke loose and set tled just under the water level about the time the ice began forming on the pond late Novem ber. The pair waddled about for lornly, as if in search of the fa miliar water-level, wood-pallet nest base, which we have been unable to repair because it's been frozen in solidly for months. Had I thought it might have eased their minds, this wildlife land lord would have dashed to the pond that very moment with apologies and promises of repairs at first full thaw. Guess they’re getting impatient, too. Later that morning, several more seasonal harbingers spotted our fields. Handsome in their white and gray outfits, the noisy seagulls must have come looking for worms wiggling up out of the ground as the snowmelt saturat ed their hibernating burrows. Accompanying Derra Dog on her nightly meadow walk a few evenings later, I made a startling find about another visitor stirring around the meadow. As we put tered along the distant side of one of the ponds after dark, my right leg suddenly plunged knee deep into the ground, almost pitching me on my face. When those groundhogs crawled out of the holes a few 1 For Value-Added Sales or for Personal Use * J Process meat easily and affordably with Chop- ■ ■ Rite Two Meat Processors. Make sausage for your J B own use or to sell. Save time and money and haye i ! the freshest ground meat ever. J ■ Made in a ■ ** ,e U-S-A- J [ gr | Start J As Low As ■ I ; Call 1-800-683-5858 ■ : ms* \ 531 Old Skippack Rd. Im M M Harleysville, PA 19438 USA on the Web: QniEinHa www.chop-rite.com Bed And Breakfast Seminar COLUMBUS, Ohio People who like interaction and are looking for an alternative source of income may want to consider starting a bed and breakfast busi ness, said Ed Smith, natural re sources specialist at the East Dis trict office of Ohio State University Extension. More and more people are tak ing weekend vacations to the country, and they often want to stay at a bed and breakfast. “With some research and a modest investment, a bed and breakfast could become a suc cessful full- or part-time business for the right type of person,” Smith said. “The most successful bed and breakfast owners like to entertain, cook, show off their fa cilities and interact with people.” Smith and his wife, Ann, fami ly and consumer sciences and community development agent at the Muskingum County office of Ohio State University Exten sion, have been teaching bed and breakfast seminars in Ohio and surrounding states for a number of years. They also have written a publication on starting a bed and breakfast. The Smiths will be the fea tured speakers at a seminar, Es tablishing Your Bed and Break fast Business, held March 1-2 at Marietta College in downtown Marietta, Ohio. The seminar is for any one interested in starting a bed and breakfast and for current operators looking to sharpen their skills. said Eric Barrett, agricul ture agent at the Washing ton County office of Ohio State University Extension who helped develop the program. Many bed and breakfasts have started with a modest weeks ago to check the weather, they must have brought some muskrat cousins along with them. But the muskrats didn’t go back to sleep. Instead, they’re out setting traps for hapless farm wives. Wonder what my hide might be worth? investment of $l,OOO to $3,000. The major expenses are for li censes, insurance, minor fix-ups and marketing, Smith said. He estimates there are more than 500 bed and breakfasts in Ohio. The potential earnings from a bed and breakfast range from a few thousand dollars per year to several hundred thousand, he said. “There are a number of varia bles that affect the potential earnings, such as the number of bedrooms, location, the lodging charge, and the number of months the business is open throughout the year,” Smith said. During the two-day seminar, the Smiths will discuss how to start a bed and breakfast, mar keting a bed and breakfast, food service, hospitality and sources of assistance. Other topics sched uled include how to prepare a business plan and Internet mar keting. A portion of the first afternoon will include a tour of local bed and breakfasts. That night, most participants will stay in a bed and breakfast to get one-on-one experience talking with the inn keepers. The Establishing Your Bed and Breakfast Business seminar is sponsored by Ohio State Uni- * Connects to your existing central duct or hydromc system tjyutanwtalnc ♦Built at the same location for 25 years, (since 1976) • 10-year warranty Williamson Enterprises p or Qf ea / ers an( j more info: 11051 Hwy 16 E. To ,| free; 877/606-3113 Philadelphia, MS 39350 versity Extension, the Marietta Small Business Development Center and the Marietta-Wash ington County Convention and Visitors Bureau. The program begins at 10:45 a.m. on March 1 and concludes at noon on March 2. The regis tration fee includes one lunch, breakfast, resource materials and one night’s lodging in a bed and breakfast. Registration is $9O for one person, $l4O for two people registering and staying together, and $4O per person if they are not staying in a bed and break fast on March 1. The number of registrations with no overnight accommoda tions is limited because the expe rience of staying in a bed and breakfast is critical to the learn ing experience, Barrett said. Pre-registration is required by Feb. 24. For registration and more information about the seminar, contact Barrett at the Washington County Extension office, (740) 376-7431 or e-mail him at barrett.9o@osu.edu. Peo ple who are interested in starting a bed and breakfast business but are unable to attend this pro gram can receive the program materials by contacting Ed Smith at the East District Exten sion office, (740) 732-2381.