I
made a day trip to the farm last Friday (August 10th) to water and
wash clothes. Mike had gone with friends
on a motorcycle trip into the Oregon wilderness, so it was a perfect
opportunity for a friend to ride along with me. We had a delightful day. The
clothes dried quickly in the heat and we were on our way back to town early in
the afternoon.
When
we were here on Friday, harvest was just beginning. The operation was in the canola
fields at the corner of Dobson and Curfman Roads, about a mile from the
farmhouse. I didn’t think much about it because our property was all in wheat, so
it came as a complete surprise to me when we drove in yesterday and all of our
wheat had been harvested. Even the neighbors fields have been harvested. And
the harvesters are gone – not so much as the sound of a machine in the distance.
It must have been a fast-paced three days, and we missed it.
I
enjoy being here when they harvest. It brings the remembrance of what harvest
was years ago. A feeling of excitement would pervade the agricultural community
at harvest, the fulfillment of the year’s work. Harvest is noise and activity
in an otherwise quiet environment. Harvest meant income for the farmer and jobs
for laborers. And that naturally boosted the economy of our little towns. It was tiring work for everyone involved. If you were the farmer’s
wife, it was part of your job description to prepare food for the farm hands, including bread, pies, cakes, cookies
baked in hot weather over a wood stove (if you go back far enough). August is harvest time here, and I suppose that regionally it was three weeks to a month in duration.
These
days, it’s all over in about a day. The work crew is minimal – machine operators
and truck drivers. Our only interaction with them is a wave as they pass the
house. They ask nothing of us except that we keep Nellie out of the way. (Nellie fears the lawn mower but not the huge combines.) Operating their machines from air-conditioned cabs, they bring their own
lunch and unless a machine breaks down, they hardly stop. No, stopping to rest
is no longer a necessity, and providing a meal to the workers is no longer part of the equation.
Even
so, I’m disappointed that I missed it, but Mike says to look on the bright
side: the windows were closed (I guarantee that plenty of dust will settle
anyway) and we had no laundry on the line. And now we can walk the fields again.
After
being closed over the weekend, the house was hot and stuffy yesterday, but with
the windows open overnight, it’s pleasant right now. I'm getting ready to bake zucchini
bread while it’s still cool. It’s supposed to be cooler today – 86 instead of
94 – with the heat building into the 90s again over the weekend (over 104 in
the valley). It’s hazy with smoke from regional fires. KW
[The last three photos were taken at eventide. Farmland provides an ever-changing dynamic of light and shadow.]
2 comments:
It's amazing how quickly work can be done with many machines. Sorry you missed it.
Around here, we get frustrated with chores that seemingly take far longer to do than they should. We would see whole kitchen renovations completed in 20 minutes on TV and so we certainly should be able to do (fill in the blank) in a matter of minutes. Finally I realized I was being bamboozled by "speeded-up-movie mode" trickery. Even so, it still seems that most chores take far longer than they should to get done. Unless it's harvest.
I remember reading a Christmas novel years ago. The heroine decorated the tree, baked cookies and wrapped packages in two hours. That's just unrealistic and it made me angry because, like you, I realized that such images create a false expectation.
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