Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! Thanksgiving is by far my favorite holiday of the year. I look forward to standing outside drinking a beer while making sure the deep fryer doesn’t set the neighborhood on fire. The highlight of the traditional Thanksgiving meal is obviously the turkey, but the green beans, cranberries, sweet potatoes, apples, and pumpkin are all products of a successful harvest. The preparations for Thanksgiving dinner can feel like a tall order, including shopping, getting the turkey thawed on time, the logistics of cooking multiple dishes in one oven, cleaning the house so your in-laws don’t judge, decorating, and coordinating family schedules.
While we are probably all focused on just these few days of work immediately before the holiday, it pales in comparison to the thousands of people across the country who have been working for months to make this holiday meal possible. To start, the turkeys that most of us will be serving this year were fed on the corn, soybeans, and small grains planted and harvested by farmers in 2022. From the time turkey poults (the term for baby turkeys) hatch until they reach their mature weight, they will consume approximately 60-80 pounds of grain. To feed the 40 million turkeys consumed on Thanksgiving alone, this equates to more than 2.4 billion pounds of grain.
Raising a turkey from hatching to market weight takes between three to five months. During this time, turkey farmers will need to check on the turkeys multiple times a day to ensure that they have adequate food, clean water, and are healthy. After the turkeys reach a mature weight, they are then sent to a processing plant or butcher to be prepared for your kitchen. Once we include in this equation the feed mill operators, truck drivers, hatchery employees, and others who help along the way, we can see a more complete picture of the people it takes to produce the food we eat.
And that’s just the turkey! Thinking about the side dishes, whether it’s green beans or pumpkin pie, we can talk about the farmers, laborers, employees at packing facilities and many more who are involved in making sure those agricultural products make it to your Thanksgiving table.
Thanksgiving has grown to include many traditions unique to each family in the United States, but the roots of the holiday are closely tied to the agricultural heritage of our country. Long before football and black Friday shopping were added to the mix, this holiday existed solely as a way for communities and families to celebrate a successful harvest. Early Thanksgiving festivities began when nearly 90% of the population lived on farms, and they relied on the food they produced each year to feed their family. A failed harvest likely meant a long winter with very little extra food available. Celebrating a successful harvest means a lot today, but it certainly had different consequences in our past.
Source: ofbf.org
Photo Credit: istock-fotokostic
Categories: Ohio, General