Comments and Feedback

This is such a great story. It's nice to hear when people are able to make such positive, lifelong connections.
Jon
POSTED Tue, Jun 26, 2007 1:30 PM PDT
a wonderful idea, too bad I'm not looking any more. Made me recall my many years of rearing horses and all my own meat animals as well as a huge garden, canning and yeah, a full time job and kids too.
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 1:31 AM PDT
Apparently Mr. Miller has concluded that there really aren’t any gay cowboys or cowgirls since that isn’t an option. As usual, gay people are treated as second class citizens.
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 6:04 AM PDT
I think this is great!! Caleb, there is a match site for gays only. Perhaps you should look into it more.
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 7:39 AM PDT
Old cowboys have no place to go other than bars[what a drag] We would like to have an option such as this vinue. Thank you
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 8:11 AM PDT
Who would "fake being a farmer" anyway (re: last paragraph of article). As someone who comes from one of the most rural states out there (I moved away when I became an adult) I can tell you, when/if a guy told me he was a farmer I skedaddled. Manure-smell, sweat, itching all over during harvest, the heat, all the fatty red-meat eating every day. But I'm glad they have a place where they can meet others like themselves.
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 8:20 AM PDT
I think it's great what Mr. Miller is doing. I also agree with the statement that "City folks just don't get it." Being a farmer is a 24/7/365 kind of life no matter what type of farming/ranching you do. It takes a special kind of person to make that type of commitment. I grew up on a farm and wish I could provide the same for my son because I believe it was the best place in the world. Keep up the good work.
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 8:32 AM PDT
If a country girl would like to come to california this is hwere you can contact me. I am looking for a nice looking girl, honest and faithful. I think country girls have those atributes. If you are 40+ answer my message. edudian11@yahoo.com
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 8:45 AM PDT
When I lived on the Rezz there too was a shortage of finding a good relationship as you would find out the person was a cuzin or an uncle on and on. My Mom mete a worker from California out of her race and so she was safe.LOL. so I was raised off the Rezz in Redondo beach. And so I am again left with a gap as I dont really fit in either world.So I go mainstream. I visit my Rezz all the time, every 7 years at least, I'm grateful to have lived there as a child.. great site. keep up the good work
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 9:00 AM PDT
Freedom of choice, that's what it is all about! God bless everyone, no matter what you do-make it your best! I think it's a good thing we still have some farmers and country oriented people left to carry on a sense of value and hard work! :) Live, Love, & Laugh
POSTED Wed, Jun 27, 2007 9:06 AM PDT
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People of the Web

Cupid for Country Folk

"The silence of a falling star lights up a purple sky / And as I wonder where you are I'm so lonesome I could cry" - From Hank Williams' 1949 song, "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry"

By KEVIN SITES, TUE JUN 26, 11:11 AM PDT

The idea of an online dating service for farmers might strike those of us who don't live on a farm — about 99 percent of Americans — as a bit of a joke.

But to Jerry Miller, the founder of FarmersOnly.com, matching up country folk for rural romance is no laughing matter; "It's the most important thing that I've ever done in my life."

Miller is an unlikely rural cupid. An advertising executive, he lives and works in suburban Cleveland.

Jerry Miller plays cupid to farmers with his online dating website.

It was the ad business that gave Miller the idea for FarmersOnly. Through one of his agency's clients, an association of alpaca farmers, he met a rural woman who mentioned her frustration with online dating.

"She said the city guys that contacted her just don't have a clue and that's where the slogan for my site came," he says with a eureka smile. "'City folks just don't get it!'"

Miller says his clients have more obstacles than most on their road to romance. One of the biggest is physical distance. Only about 1 percent of Americans actually live on farms today. That can leave a lot of space between neighbors.

Miller's online service bridges those country miles with the Internet, creating a space where like-minded folks can meet up anytime rather than waiting for the annual Fourth of July picnic.

The site's clients are not just farmers, but anyone whose life and work is tied to the land.  One such client was Ohio State University equestrian coach Blain Newsome. She was tired of dates who wrinkled their noses at horse manure — or who were simply not gentlemen.

Through FarmersOnly, Newsome met a farm machinery salesman named Kris Young. They're getting hitched in the fall.


"It's the most important thing that I've ever done in my life." — Jerry Miller


Although FarmersOnly is just a speck in the nearly half-billion dollar online dating industry, it has already sown the seeds of success. In just two years since the site was founded, Miller has signed up more than 64,000 people, with members in all 50 states and Canada.

And with a specialized dating pool that deep, Miller says farmers are finding love almost too fast.

"I get quite a few e-mails saying, 'Thank you, I met somebody on your free week trial,'" he says.

But Miller says he's not really in it for the money anyway. He's just happy being able to use his advertising skills on something more enduring than the agency's usual work — clients like car dealers and a cleaning potion called Goo Gone.

On his desk, Miller has a large black binder filled with thank you notes and invitations from people he says met through FarmersOnly. Forty have already married, with another twenty weddings coming up, says Miller.

While he's serious about the work of the site, he imbues the project with his warm and offbeat sense of humor, promoting it with video ads featuring talking animals. He also talks about planning a wedding for special clients at the site of a tractor pull.

And though he's not a farmer himself, he knows his clientele.

"You can't fake being a farmer, you know," he says. "On a regular site, you could say, 'Oh, I'm a lawyer,' or whatever. But if you say you're a farmer and they say, 'What kind of tractor do you drive and what model number and you know, how often do you feed your Holstein cow and that,' if you're faking it, you're dead."

-Producer: Jamie Rubin
-Video Editors: Edo Brizio and Steve Neilson
 

 

 

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