Winner of the Minnesota Book Award and the Red River Heritage Award!
The Haymakers is an epic--the history of man's struggle with nature as
well as man's struggle against machines. It relates the story of farmers
and their obligations to their families, to the animals they fed, and to
the land they tended. But The Haymakersis also an elegy--to a way of
life fast disappearing from our landscape. In the most heartfelt essays,
Hoffbeck chronicles his own family's struggle to hold onto their family
farm and his personal struggle in deciding to leave farming for another
way of life.
Hoffbeck also seeks to document and preserve the commonplace methods of
haymaking, information about haying that might otherwise be lost to
posterity. He describes the tools and the methods of haymaking as well
as the relentless demands of the farm. Using diaries, agricultural
guidebooks and personal interviews, the folkways of cutting, raking, and
harvesting hay have been recorded in these chapters. In the end, this
book is not so much about agricultural history as it is about family
history, personal history--how farm families survive, even persevere.