A Farmish Kind of Life

Death: It’s Part of Life on the Homestead


Listen Later

Death. It's that very real part of homesteading that no one really likes to talk about much.
Dealing with animal death on the homestead is a touchy subject, but it's one that really can't be ignored. If you have animals on your homestead, you will, at some point, deal with death—generally, for one of four reasons.
(Don't want to read all the words? This blog post is also a podcast—just press the triangle play button on the little black bar at the top of this post!)
Death on the homestead: animals raised for meat
Whether you choose to butcher at home or send your animals away to be processed, death comes to us all, little chicken. There is no way to get around dealing with animal death on the farm if your purpose in raising a certain animal is that they will eventually end up in your freezer.
Death on the homestead: old age
No matter what anyone says, we bond with our farm animals. The longer they are around, the stronger that bond. It's hard to walk into the barn and discover your favorite goat or horse or cow has suddenly died.
Animals can live a long and happy life at your homestead—and hopefully, they do!— but nothing lives forever.
Death on the homestead: euthanization of sick/hurt animals
Animals get sick. Animals get hurt. Animals have issues that can't be remedied (or cause us to consider financial ramifications for keeping them alive).
It's hard to make the decision regarding the life of your animal who has been sick for an extended period of time and isn't showing improvement. It's a tough call to know what to do when your animal can't walk or get up or move at all.
Being a homesteader means tough life and death decisions—in the most literal sense of the phrase.
Death on the homestead: predators
When predators visit your homestead, there isn't always a happy ending for the animal they're after, or the predator themselves. At our farm we've lost animals to fox, eagles, dogs, hawks, raccoons, owls, as well as many predators I haven't actually seen in action.
Again, it's part of homesteading with animals. And sometimes, despite your best predator proofing tricks, they'll still find their way in.
Death is a way of life on the homestead.
Simply put, death comes with the territory of homesteading.
It's difficult to write a blog post about it, however, because in trying to say something like "it gets easier" or "you'll get more comfortable with it", it's almost always scooped up and taken the wrong way.
People want to argue semantics—usually people who aren't homesteaders, because those of us who do deal with death on the homestead know our feelings surrounding it are hard to describe. When reading an article, we tend to "understand what the author meant" regardless of the way they've probably fumbled through it.
But I think it does get easier in a sense...even though that still doesn't sound like the right word.
The first time I had to euthanize a sick chicken, I cried. A lot. The most recent time I did it, I didn't cry at all. Does that mean I've lost respect for the animals I raise?
I don't think so. I deeply appreciate and care for the animals we raise here. I just think death is part of the package, and it's become an odd sort of farm normal for me.
Man. Talk about fumbling through the explanation of feelings...
Is our discomfort with death on the homestead because we're more removed?
I often try to imagine what it was like in 1850 out on the prairie. I wonder if people sat outside the lean to contemplating how someone could take the life of a chicken in order to eat supper, and whether or not it made them sad.
I mean, I don't intend to come off as super tough and callous, because I'm not. It's tough to be the one to deliver killing shots to 3 pigs you've raised. Butcher day isn't really my favorite day on the calendar. There is always a sort of serious solemnity to it.
But I do think the fact that we can devote so much brain space and social media cha...
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

A Farmish Kind of LifeBy Amy Dingmann

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

127 ratings


More shows like A Farmish Kind of Life

View all
The Wellness Mama Podcast by Katie Wells

The Wellness Mama Podcast

3,962 Listeners

Pioneering Today Podcast - Homesteading in a Modern World by Melissa K Norris

Pioneering Today Podcast - Homesteading in a Modern World

966 Listeners

Living Free in Tennessee - Nicole Sauce by Nicole Sauce

Living Free in Tennessee - Nicole Sauce

139 Listeners

The Exam Room by the Physicians Committee by Physicians Committee

The Exam Room by the Physicians Committee

3,392 Listeners

The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast by Dr Rupy Aujla

The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast

649 Listeners

The Dr. Hyman Show by Dr. Mark Hyman

The Dr. Hyman Show

9,271 Listeners

The Bible Recap by Tara-Leigh Cobble

The Bible Recap

35,800 Listeners

Simple Farmhouse Life by Lisa Bass

Simple Farmhouse Life

2,042 Listeners

Homemaker Chic by Angela Reed & Shaye Elliott

Homemaker Chic

2,079 Listeners

Beyond Labels Clips by Joel Salatin & Dr. Sina McCullough

Beyond Labels Clips

253 Listeners

Homesteaders of America by Homesteaders of America

Homesteaders of America

155 Listeners

Everyday Homesteading by Homesteading Family

Everyday Homesteading

659 Listeners

The Dr. John Delony Show by Ramsey Network

The Dr. John Delony Show

7,483 Listeners

The Mel Robbins Podcast by Mel Robbins

The Mel Robbins Podcast

20,454 Listeners

The Primal Podcast by Rina Ahluwalia

The Primal Podcast

208 Listeners