How to Shovel Manure and Other Life Lessons for the Country Woman
Gwen Petersen(Author)
Voyageur Press
Published on 15. August 2007
Book
Hardback
224 pages
978-0-7603-2862-0 (ISBN)
Description
It's not a job you want to take on without a sense of humor. Oops--it's not a job at all. It's an all-encompassing life, being a country woman on the ranch or farm, and with wit and equanimity like Gwen Petersen's, it can be survived. In fact, with Petersen's help, it can be drop-dead hilarious. A much-loved cowgirl scribe in rare form, Petersen eases us through the rigors of country living, from raising chickens to shoveling manure to cooking Rocky Mountain oysters. You'd think midwifing a calf was no laughing matter--until Gwen steps in with her expert advice. She has wise counsel for sharing the yard with a gaggle of ill-tempered geese; step-by-step instructions for harvesting pig manure; and sound advice for staying cool through haying season and coping with the chaos of Christmas on the ranch or farm.
For good measure, the book includes poems and recipes that will transport you to a country state of mind--whether you hail from the city's busiest streets or the ranch's quietest gravel roads. Equal parts handy how-to advice, rural humor, philosophy, and fond farm nostalgia, How to Shovel Manure and Other Life Lessons for the Country Woman is all good.
For good measure, the book includes poems and recipes that will transport you to a country state of mind--whether you hail from the city's busiest streets or the ranch's quietest gravel roads. Equal parts handy how-to advice, rural humor, philosophy, and fond farm nostalgia, How to Shovel Manure and Other Life Lessons for the Country Woman is all good.
Reviews / Votes
Small Farm Today, Sept./Dec. 2007"These personal stories are told in a hilarious and sometimes touching way ... This book ties country women together with a sisterhood of stories that tell of their courage, stamina, and character revealed in the trials, tribulations, successes and satisfaction of being a country woman."
The Prairie Star
"This rollicking work features down-to-earth advice, poetry, down-home recipes and original limericks, all bubbling with Gwen's wry sense of humor."
Great Falls Tribune, July 27, 2007
"While there are tidbits of actual usable information in 'How to Shovel Manure,' the book is primarily entertaining."
, Aug. 15, 2007 Bookworm Sez, October 2007
"How to Shovel Manure is an enjoyable little book, perfect for leaving in the truck or tractor to read while waiting, and packed with loads of information sprinkled with wry humor. Throughout the book are cute little limericks and poems, old-time ads for farm products, and recipes that every country woman will want to try. If you're a Country Woman who's proud of the differences between you and your city friends, then you have to have this book. For you How to Shovel Manure is a shovel full of fun." Iowa Farmer Today, Nov. 3, 2007
"Being a country woman is not just a job, it is an encompassing way of life. But with wit and equanimity alike in Gwen Petersons' 'How to Shovel Manure and Other Life Lessons for the Country Woman,' it can be survived."
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Quarto Publishing Group USA Inc
Illustrations
1 color photos, 28 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 184 mm
Width: 127 mm
Weight
327 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7603-2862-0 (9780760328620)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
08/2010
Voyageur Press
€17.49
Available for download
Person
For Gwen Petersen, the seeds of country living were planted during youthful summertime visits to her grandparents' Illinois farm and hours helping her mother raise chickens in their city backyard. When Gwen married a rancher, her background as an occupational therapist for the bothered and bewildered helped her some in figuring out how to cope with country life. After thirty-five years of muddling through--and living with an assortment of cattle, pigs, sheep, chickens, cats, dogs, horses, and a gaggle of particularly nasty-tempered geese--she's starting to catch on. Today Gwen lives on a small place in Montana where she raises miniature horses and works on her attitude. Her humorous writings on barnyard foibles include magazine columns, cowboy and -girl poetry, and her book The Greenhorn's Guide to the Woolly West.