• Curt Arens

    Graduates: Consider Coming Home to the Farm to Roost

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on May 7, 2013

    High school graduates around farm country will receive lots of advice from family, friends, teachers and neighbors over the next few weeks during their commencement ceremonies. Valedictorians will bid their old high schools and hometowns farewell, and offer well wishes for classmates as they begin the next chapters in their young lives. Graduates will hear hometown folks say things like, “Go out and make something of your lives.” They’ll hear advice like, “Get out…

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  • Curt Arens

    I'm Dreaming of a White Arbor Day

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on April 16, 2013

    I’m sure someone will blame our most recent Spring snowstorm on climate change. Last year’s drought was blamed on climate change too. For most Nebraskans, it is business as usual. Crazy weather is quite normal. Tramping through the eight-plus inches of snow we received last week to feed calves, I thought back at how many of these April storms I’ve seen in my lifetime. There have been more than a few. When I was dating my wife, she was living about 75 miles away in…

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  • Curt Arens

    Partners in Farming. Partners in Life.

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on March 19, 2013

    My wife is awesome. Let me get that out there. I’m not just saying that because I’m trying to sweet talk her into a new farm gadget. I don’t tell her often enough. Most husbands probably feel this way about their wives, but take for granted that the wives know how they feel. I hope they know, because on the farm, it takes a pretty strong partnership at the top – in a husband and wife team – to make it all work. And there are tons of distractions, troubles…

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  • Curt Arens

    Families Growing Our Food: Father-Son Dynamic Farming Duo

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on March 1, 2013

    Curt's Comments:   Farmers are often maligned for caring only about profits, and little about the soil. Personally, I have found the opposite to be true. Farmers today understand the soil and the importance of the soil more than ever before. That's why farmers have adopted no-till systems so readily. My case in point is the Dvorak farm. When I first visited the Dvoraks for a story that ran in our December 2011 print issue, I was impressed by the size and efficiency of their…

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  • Curt Arens

    For Farmers, Silence is Golden

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on January 15, 2013

    Last night, I patted our two-year-old son gently on his back for a few minutes, leaning over his bed. He had been awakened around midnight by a bad dream or the creaks and cracks of our old farm home. He was frightened, so I offered him a glass of milk and put him back to bed, hoping he would fall back asleep, so I could. But, this was not to be. After several minutes of crying, I calmed him down again, and now patting his back, I was hoping he would be down for the night. I patted lighter…

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  • Curt Arens

    Farmers As Hometown Volunteers

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on January 8, 2013

    Farmers and ranchers are generous people. When a neighbor is injured or ill, folks just pitch in, without being asked. Rural folks are also generally focused on volunteering for their farm organizations, commodity groups, schools and churches. These are priorities to those of us who live and work on the farm. However, sometimes in rural communities there is a disconnected feeling between farmers and ranchers and folks who live in town. I’m not sure why this exists, but some farmers…

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  • Curt Arens

    Farm New Year's Resolution: Share Your Stories

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on December 31, 2012

    No one has to convince me that Nebraska farmers are good stewards, protectors of their environment and caregivers of their livestock. I see it every day as I visit with producers around the state and travel to their farms and ranches. They have always been the first environmentalists, the first soil conservationists, the first and best at proper animal husbandry. While producers in general enjoy positive reviews by most consumers around the world, particularly those in other countries…

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  • Curt Arens

    The Town Name Says It All

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on December 11, 2012

    Nebraska Farmer editor, Don McCabe, and I have the privilege of traveling the state’s byways regularly, visiting with farmers and ranchers, and stopping by rural communities in every section of the Good Life. Personally, I’ve appreciated the opportunity to not only visit these towns, but to talk with local residents and learn more about what makes Nebraska villages special. Our towns are as different as they can be. They were founded for varied reasons and have colorful, often…

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  • Curt Arens

    Neighbor Helping Neighbor - It's a Farmer Thing

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on October 30, 2012

    Our hearts and our prayers go out to all the folks living and working along the East Coast and eastern Corn Belt regions this week. In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy and the storms, blizzards and raging winds that spread out over the eastern third of the country, the thing that amazes me most is how well folks pull together and work together, pitching in to overcome the obstacles of these huge natural disasters. We saw it firsthand this summer in Nebraska, as farmers, ranchers and…

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  • Curt Arens

    Nebraska State Fair Surprise

    Husker Home Place

     by Curt Arens
     on September 4, 2012

    I didn’t have the opportunity to attend the Nebraska State Fair until I was a freshman in college, living in Lincoln. In those days, the University of Nebraska Collegiate 4-H Club ran a foodstand in the old 4-H building. I was wrangled into working many hours at the foodstand, which was the big fundraiser for the club. But after a few days at the fair, I was hooked. I enjoyed the 4-H and FFA exhibits and all the excitement and pageantry of the state fair. However, since the fair moved…

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