
FOR THOSE OF US raised on farms, autumn draws us into the countryside like moths navigating toward a porch light.

It is the sights, sounds and smells of harvest that pull me into the land, deep into rural Minnesota this time of year. Here farmers labor to bring in the crops before winter settles in.

For me, this is a sensory experience that takes me back six decades to the southwestern Minnesota crop and dairy farm of my childhood. While farm equipment has changed and most farmers farm much more land than my dad ever did, harvest is still harvest.


Dust flies as combines chomp across corn and soybean fields. Engines roar. Golden kernels of corn and orbs of soybeans flow from combines into trucks and grain wagons. The land smells of earth and drying fields, a familiar scent even now decades removed from farm life.
I can almost feel the pressure farmers experience while they race against Mother Nature to finish the harvest. Long days and nights in the field are all part of harvesting as farmers gather in a growing season of efforts. And then hope for good crop prices.

There’s so much uncertainty in farming. So much hinging on weather, the economy, the market. So many decisions to make about when to sell, when to store, when to invest in new equipment and much more. I couldn’t handle the stress.

Farming is not easy with its risks and challenges and uncertainties. Yet, there’s a certain reward for crop farmers in seeing seeds they’ve sown germinate and grow into thriving plants under the spring and summer sun. There’s a certain satisfaction in harvesting those mature crops each September and October.

And for me, raised on the land and witness to many harvests, I feel memories rushing back as I watch combines move across farm fields deep in the southern Minnesota countryside. I feel reconnected to the land, the place that embraced and helped shape me as a person, writer, photographer and poet.
© Copyright 2025 Audrey Kletscher Helbling



Me, too.
I find joy in this very thing, yesterday I drove the gravel roads of southeast Minnesota as I have for many years visiting the old farm sites where my dad grew up! I miss not having him by my side, but I spoke to him as if he were. There were lots and lots of grain trucks and combines in the field, but still many fields untouched. I love the smells and the sounds of the country at harvest time!
What a bittersweet drive that must have been for you. I love that you shared this time each year with your dear dad.
The sights, the sounds, the smells, the emotions, the hard work of harvest in Minnesota — you captured them all just like I remember. Thanks, Audrey.
You are welcome. I expect you really miss Minnesota this time of year. And in the spring during planting season.
I was thinking this must be a high pressure time for the farmers, and you spoke to it, with all of the elements they have to consider and a relatively short time frame to get it all done. how lucky to be transported back to your early days on the farm during this season as you see it all again –
I always enjoy harvest, even as I contemplate the challenges farmers have always faced.
Thanks for the fun, fall harvest tour!
You’re welcome.