Wisconsin Agriculturist Logo

Almost anything can be hazardous to your health

Life is Simple: Experience is the only true teacher.

Jerry Crownover

January 28, 2022

3 Min Read
sunset

These days, it’s next to impossible to purchase anything that doesn’t come with a warning about how the item may be dangerous to your safety or harmful to your health. For example, it must be about the sixth or seventh cycle of whether eggs are healthy or harmful, and I’m still confused as to whether one beer a day increases or decreases the danger or benefit of that egg.

For the record, after my birth, I came home from the doctor’s office without the security of a federally approved child safety seat. Most of the toys I remember playing with have been banned, and I must have ridden a bicycle 10,000 miles — without once strapping on a helmet.

There were unsecured guns in the house (usually under the bed or in the back corner of a closet), and by the time I was 9, I could take them, without permission, to rid the farm of a pesky varmint or retrieve meat for supper or, in some cases, both. Granted, it was a different time, but I wasn’t the only boy who brought his new rifle to the one-room schoolhouse for show-and-tell on the first day back from Christmas vacation. I even remember the teacher allowing us to target practice during recess, and the only kid who ever got hurt was my buddy Barney, who wondered if it was possible to stick a .22 shell in a rotten stump and use a rock as a substitute for the firing pin. Turns out, you can. With no school nurse (again, something unheard of today), the teacher wrapped up the end of his thumb with a clean rag and some tape and reminded him to be sure and let his mom take a look at it when he went home that afternoon.

I was operating the farm tractor by myself when I was 9 or 10. It had no cab or rollover protection, and I can remember plowing acres and acres of oat ground from the time I got home from school until darkness set in, completely unsupervised, while Dad attended to other farm chores. Today, they would put my father in jail for allowing that.

When I was 14, I convinced my parents to let me use part of my calf money to purchase a small dirt-bike motorcycle by rationalizing that it would be a great benefit for driving the cattle to the barn each night. Again, no helmet was needed — except for that one time.

I can also remember meticulously removing the seat belts from my first car because I thought they really detracted from the appearance and comfort of the interior. After all, nobody was ever going to use them anyway.

Looking back, there were no amount of warning stickers, public service announcements, danger labels, parental advisories or federal rules that could have kept me from doing all the things I’ve done in my lifetime. Experience is the only true teacher.

Warning: The content of this column, in no way, is meant to promote dangerous activities or dissuade anyone from using caution and common sense in carrying out one’s daily life. Labels and warnings are affixed for a reason — and make up your own mind about eggs.

Crownover raises beef cattle in Missouri.

About the Author(s)

Jerry Crownover

Jerry Crownover wrote a bimonthly column dealing with agriculture and life that appeared in many magazines and newspapers throughout the Midwest, including Wisconsin Agriculturist. He retired from writing in 2024 and now tells his stories via video on the Crown Cattle Company YouTube channel.

Crownover was raised on a diversified livestock farm deep in the heart of the Missouri Ozarks. For the first few years of his life, he did without the luxuries of electricity or running water, and received his early education in one of the many one-room schoolhouses of that time. After graduation from Gainesville High School, he enrolled at the University of Missouri in the College of Agriculture, where he received a bachelor's degree in 1974 and a master's of education degree in 1977.

After teaching high school vocational agriculture for five years, Crownoever enrolled at Mississippi State University, where he received a doctorate in agricultural and Extension education. He then served as a professor of ag education at Missouri State University for 17 years. In 1997, Crownover resigned his position at MSU to do what he originally intended to after he got out of high school: raise cattle.

He now works and lives on a beef cattle ranch in Lawrence County, Mo., with his wife, Judy. He has appeared many times on public television as an original Ozarks Storyteller, and travels throughout the U.S. presenting both humorous and motivational talks to farm and youth groups.

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like