Sumdum, I sent you a PM with another excellent choice.
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Originally posted by shtferbrains View PostYou have some good options there but if you end up still looking there is a woman up here running a crop scouting business with her husband.
They also are farming a fair bit.
I can say she ain't no Poser but as cattle guy don't need no scouting so don't know her real well.
You might know her family as she comes from down you way.
http://www.aggrowconsulting.com/meet_the_team.html http://www.aggrowconsulting.com/meet_the_team.html
Seem to hire good people who stay with them.
I'm guessing CaseIH or Seldom know her better than me.
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Originally posted by Blaithin View PostAll that’s true. Which is why women in ag aren’t hard to find. Usually it just requires focus to shift a bit. If you’re used to seeing the trees in the yard, you don’t always recognize how many trees there are. For a flora kind of analogy hah
But perhaps this ease of, overlooking is the wrong word but the only one I can think of right now, women is why they should be interviewed more. Call them Agvocates? Sure, if that’s what they do, but many don’t. Most of us just farm and work, we don’t go out and constantly look for ways to promote ag.
Being a woman in the ag industry is a funny thing. The farmers I talk to regularly support and endorse their wives and their daughters (and yes, their mothers as well) for how skilled and competent they are on the farm. Yet... they seem surprised when they run into other women with similar skill sets. That surprise is enhanced if the woman isn’t working with a man. And in most cases I do just consider it surprise. Women just aren’t the first thing that comes to mind when they think of employees or employers in the industry - and that doesn’t just apply to men either, female farmers are just as likely to react similarly. It takes them a few seconds for it to sink in and then the women just become part of the everyday and are no longer considered “women in agâ€, we’re just another farmer or worker. Which is great, but also why sometimes people struggle to think of women in ag, because we’re just ordinary daily occurrences.
I don’t know what sort of project this photographer is working on but it would be interesting if they just chose a location and worked out in a circle. Stopping at every farm yard and enquiring if a woman lives and/or works on the farm, either family or employee. They may be shocked with the results they get - however I’m sure none of us on here would be.
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