Patio Ponderings
Exploring the Expected and the Obscure in Agriculture
From a lifetime in agriculture to deep dives into leadership, rural life, and the evolving food system, Patio Pondering is a podcast where thoughtful conversations meet the open air. Hosted by Jim Smith, Ph.D., a seasoned Swine Nutritionist, agricultural thinker, and storyteller, this podcast explores the connections between our agricultural roots and the broader world.
What started as daily reflections—scribbled with a morning coffee in hand—has grown into a podcast that uncovers the insights, challenges, and sometimes-forgotten history of the industry that feeds us all. Whether solo pondering or engaging in candid discussions with guests, this show digs into everything from livestock production to food trends, rural business shifts, and the personal stories that shape agricultural life.
Now available in both audio and video formats, Patio Pondering brings these discussions to life on YouTube and podcast platforms alike. Whether you prefer to listen on the go or watch the conversation unfold, you’ll find fresh perspectives, candid storytelling, and the kind of conversations that make you think twice.
Subscribe and join the conversation—because agriculture is more than just dirt and livestock. It’s a story worth telling.
Patio Ponderings
The Hard Part Isn’t the Cooking - Lee Stanish
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In this episode of the Patio Pondering Podcast, Jim sits down with fellow Purdue FarmHouse brother Lee Stanish — proprietor and pitmaster of Eddie Joe’s Icehouse near Lafayette, Indiana — for a conversation about leadership, responsibility, and the changing realities of managing people.
Lee shares perspectives shaped by agriculture, Purdue, FarmHouse leadership, and nearly a decade of restaurant ownership. The discussion explores employee expectations, resiliency, staffing challenges, personality differences, leadership without authority, and what it was like helping lead the effort to tear down and rebuild the Purdue FarmHouse chapter house.
This is not a conversation about barbecue recipes or résumé highlights. It is a thoughtful discussion about people — how they work, what motivates them, and how leadership changes when the outcome ultimately rests on your shoulders.
Topics include:
- Managing employees in today’s labor environment
- Leadership lessons from FarmHouse and the Purdue chapter house project
- Building teams in restaurants and volunteer organizations
- Resiliency, work ethic, and changing expectations
- Personality testing and understanding team dynamics
- The difference between operating a business and owning one
If you enjoy conversations about leadership, agriculture, entrepreneurship, and human nature, this episode will make you think.