Five Dollars for Milk
Wednesday, July 18th, 2007Five dollars per gallon for milk by fall might be enough to cause people to give it up. Milk and dairy prices are going up because gas prices are spiking transportation costs. Supposedly feed for the cows has gone up because corn is being used for ethanol also. Which I think is a crock. Anybody see a bunch of ethanol pumps anywhere? Anyway, there are droughts in many parts of the world affecting milk production also while demand for milk worldwide is increasing.
I suggest that people in Monroe buy Monroe milk from Calder Brothers Dairy. If you’re going to pay $5 per gallon for that shabby milk from the grocery store, you may as well get the best. Calders is the sweetest milk my husband and I have ever tasted. It’s pure milk like it used to be. We are lucky enough to be within the delivery routes for Calders out here in South Rockwood. We have had a milk box and a milkman for 20 years. I am spoiled forever. We get 3 quarts per week and anything else Calder’s produces on my porch every Tuesday, like fresh eggs. We drink skim milk, and I will challenge my Calder’s skim milk to the regular milk at the store for taste and substance anytime. It might be skim but I still get a cream ring at the top of the bottle. Now that’s real milk. I ran out of Calders once and picked up a quart of 2% regular milk at the store. My husband wanted to know if it was sour. Calders is worth the money.
If you live in Monroe you should visit the Calders Farm off of Stony Creek Rd. because it’s fun to walk around a real farm. The more land we loose in this country to fire and urban sprawl the less likely farms like this will be around for generations to come. Turn left onto Stony Creek from Telegraph Rd. north, and follow the road until you see the signs for Calders. You’ll know you’re close when you see the black and white dairy cows. It’s an old fashioned farm with all types of animals roaming around including llamas. Kids love it.
Calders is kind to animals also. I found a home there at the farm for a rooster I rescued. The rooster was abandoned in a park near my house. Calders said they would take him. He was ornery and I figured they’d off him in a stew pot, but since he was black with green feathers, and a handsome guy, Calders found the value in his offspring. The next time I visited, I found he had his own fenced area and hen house. Nice. By the looks of all the ducks, chickens, and cats, others have left their former pets off there also.
The best part of the visit to Calders is getting ice cream in their country store. It’s oh so good. Visitors can purchase just about anything Calder’s produces at the country store. Oh and if you are an eggnog junkie during the holidays, the most decadent, richest eggnog you’ve ever tasted is made by Calders. The farm is a nice asset for Monroe. Check it out while the summer months are still here. The animals and ice cream await you. For more info read: http://www.calderdairy.com/.
