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Portrait of My Father's Dairyland(16 images)
Portrait of My Father's Dairyland
Shana Wittenwyler

"Nobody cares about the farmer because he's only 1% of the population. He has no political clout anymore. As long as people can get their groceries cheap they don't give a damn what happens to him. Period. And, It is only going to get worse."
-Mark Wittenwyler, my father

My father's generation is...
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  •  By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Green County at dusk, Monticello, Wisconsin, August 4, 2005.."They just can't keep doing this for nothing. That will be the end of it. Corporate America will run agriculture and the people will pay. They will make a shortage just like they do with fuel and jack the price sky high and you won't have a choice because you have to eat. We're learning a valuable lesson from the big oil companies and our government isn't going to do a damn thing about it. The farmer is going to be screwed out of his land and the consumer is going to get the shaft in the end.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Dylan, age 9, picks out the straw stuck between his toes after baling straw, Monticello, Wisconsin, August 5, 2005.."I want to fly planes and farm when I grow up. I like the cats, the calves and the cows but I hate baling straw because of the heat and the bales are kind of heavy. When you wear sandals your feet hurt for the next week. You get prickers and it hurts for a long time.".-excerpt from interview with Dylan Wittenwyler By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Mathew Wittenwyler, fourth generation, bales straw, Monticello, Wisconsin, August 5, 2005.."Nobody cares about the farmer because he is only 1% of the population. He has no political clout anymore. Long as people can get their groceries cheap they don't give a damn what happens to him. Period. And, it's only going to get worse.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father. By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Skinning catfish, Monticello, Wisconsin, July 17, 2005.."It used to be you were self-sufficient. The farm wife did most of the work. You had big gardens. The only time you left the damn farm was on Sunday to go to church and Saturday night to buy groceries in town.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • My father, Mark Wittenwyler, right, and John C "Hans" Marty, left, discuss the price of steers, as well as, the tumors that press against his bones. Hans impatiently awaits the county nurse to deliver oxygen. Although Hans passed away eleven days after this photograph was taken, my father continues to work as a hired hand for his widow, Ruth Marty, Monticello, Wisconsin, October 3, 2005.."It all has to end somewhere. It kills the middle class I believe. Pretty soon we'll only have the rich and the poor but I don't know what the answer is. Maybe, there is no answer. They don't seem to care. They buy foreign products instead of American ones. There is no American choice. It used to be you could buy a foreign alternative for a little bit cheaper. The one thing that foreign competition can't beat us at is agriculture. They can't make dirt. We have great land here.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Tim Schwartzlow, age 25, poses for a portrait in his brother-in-law, Randal Smith?s barn, Monticello, Wisconsin, May 24, 2006. Tim is a rarity as a young farmer starting out. While working on his brother-in-law?s farm he slowly builds equity. His new tractor cost $25,000, and each cow costs $2,000. His wife, Caroline, works as a registered nurse which allows the couple to afford healthcare for their 19 month old son..?We want to stay local. I love the lifestyle. You can do what you want when you want. I think it?s the best place and the best way to raise kids. It may be long hours, tedious work but you work 70 hours here and 70 hours in a factory and this seems like half the time because you are not just standing in one spot and pushing buttons. Day in and day out it?s different things. I think it would send a shock to the nation if everybody dumped their milk for a day or two but you are not going to get everybody to do it. I don?t see how the government cannot step in and do something because it?s the backbone of our nation.?.-excerpt from interview with Tim Schwartzlow By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Fred and Susie Marty?s home farm, Monticello, Wisconsin, December 22, 2005.."I don't understand how they price milk. They give you what they feel like giving you, mostly, I guess. Supply and demand, they claim but I don't know. How can it be 12 dollars a hundred weight one time and 15 the next? Now, it's down to below 11 dollars. Same as it was in 1980. Fuel is killing them now, this outrageous fuel price. Milk is the same price it was in 1980. In 1980, fuel was a dollar a gallon. Now, fuel is three dollars a gallon and the price of milk is the same. So, go figure. It's a big screw, period.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Main street of Monticello, Wisconsin, population 1151, July 25, 2005.."Farmers have a big investment. He's got land and he's got machinery that's worth a lot of money but he's got no cash flow. He can't make any money so he ends up selling his property off for housing or to the big guys. It's the only asset he's got to live on. His retirement is his property. It's just about impossible for a young person to start. There's just such an investment.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father. By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Ruth Wittenwyler, age 82, poses for a portrait outside of her home, which used to be one of only several Limburger cheese factories in Wisconsin. After marrying her husband in the Army, she moved to Wisconsin from her hometown, Chicago, Illinois. The daughter of a banker, she learned to be a farmer's wife through trial and error, Monticello, Wisconsin, May 22, 2006..?It was kind of strange coming up here, being a banker?s daughter, yes. We were lucky because we got the first tractor that came into Wixer?s machine shop because Harry K (her husband) had been a veteran. We got an International H. I had to drive that darn tractor backwards. I wasn?t very marvelous at driving that thing. I couldn?t back up in that any better than I can a car. I think that was my worst because I was not very mechanical. I got yelled at a lot.?.-excerpt from interview with Ruth Wittenwyler By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Mary Kay Cosmetics booth, Green County Fair, Monticello, Wisconsin, July 20, 2005.."It is just like the small business man and the little drug store and the little hardware store and variety store. They are all gone because of Wal-Mart. The big dogs are going to take over the world and the little guy is going to be out. There won't be any small family farms anymore.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Ruth Marty, age 75, poses for a portrait in her 100-year-old farmhouse. Before her husband, Hans, passed away, they were honored with Green County's Oldest Active Farm Couple Award, Monticello, Wisconsin, May 23, 2006.."We are all old now.  I had hired men with me always. I had somebody living with me from day one. I mean, first it was Dick, then after that it was a succession of hired men.  You can't find hired men anymore. It used to be a big thing. You could hire a man because they didn't have a home. You gave them room and board, therefore; they lived with you. You gave them their three meals. You did their laundry. People wouldn't put up with that anymore. They wouldn't let hired men live with them." .-excerpt from interview with Ruth Marty By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Junior Showmanship Swine Trophies at the Green County Fair, Monroe, Wisconsin, July 20, 2005.."I don't know. Hogs have gone to hell because now these big corporations like Cargill, great big feed companies, are in the hog business and the little guy can't compete with those big feed companies. They raise thousands and thousands of hogs a day they send to slaughter and they are all contract. In the old days, you just took your pigs to market. Now, you can't do that unless you have a contract. They don't even want them. So, hogs are bad. It's just bad business all the way around.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • Kent Klitzman By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • My father, left, age 55, his son, Mathew, middle, age 28, and his younger brother, Wade, right, age 47, bale straw for the family farm, Monticello, Wisconsin, August 5, 2005. Wade is the youngest of three brothers and the third generation to run the Wittenwyler family farm which now only supports a single income.."We are the only industry in the world where you give them your product for 30 days then they give you what they think it's worth. If you go to Ernie's grocery store and buy a loaf of bread you don't send him the check in a month and say, well, I think it's worth 69 cents. I blame a lot of this on the banking industry and the states, too. When the price of milk is down you have to milk more cows to increase the cash flow and all it does is create more work and you don?t have anything more left at the end anyway. They are not the ones milking these goddamn cows.".-excerpt from interview with Wade Wittenwyler By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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  • The Boar's Nest, one of several local taverns where farmers go to receive the "farm report", play cards and gossip, Monticello, Wisconsin, July 25, 2005.."The weather's always big on the farm report, who got the most rain. Generally on the agenda is who did what and blew up what, the day's story, what really happened.".-excerpt from interview with Mark Wittenwyler, my father By photographer Shana Wittenwyler
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