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Destined to Become a Farmer By Neoma Foreman
Wayne Jeans said being a farmer is all he ever wanted to do
“All I ever wanted to do when I was growing up in the 1980s was to farm. My parents said ‘get an education and get a job.’ I did, but I still wanted to farm. It took a bit of convincing them, but they finally agreed and it worked out,” Richards, Mo., farmer Wayne Jeans said. Wayne grew up on the farm his grandpa and dad purchased when they came to Vernon County in 1955. He left the farm and went to college, but came back in 1993. He and Pauline (Waltrip) were a young married couple with a 1-yearold son and wanted to raise their children on the farm. They built two hog living home in Fort Scott, Kan., and barns and Pauline mostly took care of they were unable to help with the farmthem. They had the barns for 25 years, ing. However, the children grew and along with two more children. Chase is helped as they were able. They finished now 28, Zach is 25, and their daughter, high school and went away to college. Chelsey is 22. Their son Zach chose to join the MaWayne started farming the land. Their rines. He completed his time in the milfirst tractor was a John Deere 7610. itary and did well, but wanted to come “All my dad had was a six-row plant- back to help on the farm. Chase chose er. Pauline and I purchased a 12-row to help on the farm. He and Zach are Kinsey planter. My dad had a fit. He partners with their parents, being the was used to filling up the planter boxes fourth-generation of the Jeans family to more often. He never really became ac- live on the same land. customed to believing the planter would The family is consistent with consergo more than one round and insisted we vation practices. They use minimal and fill it.” no-till planting, soil tests, plant some Wayne’s dad, J. T. Jeans, cover crops, make terraces and and a neighbor, Clarence waterways – anything that needs Schoneweather, Jr., decided done, they try to be prompt to retire the same year. Wayne to fix it. For fertilizer, they use and Pauline took on their land liquid, utilize litter, as well as and farmed about 1,200 acres. Richards, Mo. commercial dry fertilizer. As the years passed, Wayne’s They do a great deal of irparents moved to an assisted rigating. Since much of the MARCH 21, 2022
land they farm is quite a way from their home farm, they plan to limit trips to different fields and make the least trips possible. They plant a certain amount of soybeans and corn, and rotate each year. Different maturing seeds are used so they will have time to harvest according to the moisture level in the crops. They also have built a storage and handling facility, which helps them store grain more efficiently, and harvest crops in a timely manner, when the weather cooperates. “Today, we farm more acres than I ever thought we would,” Wayne said. “It takes good equipment to make things work. We shelled 200 acres of pretty decent corn in one day recently.” The Jeans family built a stand-alone shop at the farm where Wayne spends a lot of time on the computer checking grain prices and keeping up with markets and Pauline keeps up with the bookwork. Some of the wood on the walls of the shop came from the barn his grandfather had on the barn at the first farm. It has the letter “J” branded onto it making an attractive, but memorable wall. Pauline is also a pretty good combine operator when the need arises. “I can’t imagine doing anything else, but I want to say this – Pauline and I are in this together,” Wayne said. “Her work is as important as mine and she is always ready to lend a helping hand. We agree on things and do them together.”
Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com
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