29 September 2018

The Great 1958 Manual Corn Planting


This was in the summer of 1958 when Aunt Doris came east on the train from Washington State with cousins Wesley and Gordon, the first time I had ever met any of them.  I was 8 and Wes was 18.  Cousin Wes was my great hero and I followed him around everywhere.  He was cool, wore a cowboy hat, zapped woodchucks with one shot from a .22 rifle, and he had a great sense of humor.  This was a memorable summer. 

That year the rich field directly behind and north of the Double Decker building was planted in corn.  It was an extremely fertile field and always alternated between pasture, alfalfa, and corn.  But there was a very hard rainstorm that had washed out about a third of the beginning corn seedlings.  You could see where the young sprouts were coming up and where the field elsewhere was washed barren.  This was rich loam bottom-land with huge and very important corn yields for us.  It was a serious situation. 

My father took advantage of extra visitors at the farm and drafted us into labor for manual re-planting, pairing us up into two-man teams (e.g., Wes and me).  I am quite sure that Uncle Rod and Cousin Danny were a team.  Father was a friendly, generous, earnest and genuine man, charmingly persuasive, and people would go the extra mile for him. 

And I remember Uncle Albert and Cousin Ladd, on my mother’s side of the family, being a team.  They most likely were visiting the farm because Aunt Edith and Cousin Judy from that side of the family were there on a visit that summer, and thus Albert and Ladd may have been unluckily drafted into service.  (I have no idea where my mother put up all the company that summer!) 

My father carefully lined out the rows where corn should have been sprouting.  Then, in each team, the older one (Wes) would use a hoe and dig a little hole every so many measured feet straight along the row.  The younger member of the pair (me) would place about four kernels of corn seed into the hole, then the older one would use the hoe to cover it up. 

I don’t remember who watered the kernels because my focus was on the holes in front of me and the bag of seeds in my hand – but I’ll bet it must have been Father, because he had an invariable rule for new plantings, whether for seeds or sapling trees, that you first water the dry hole generously, then plant, then cover, then water generously again.  He must have hauled a lot of water. 

Our two-man teams moved slowly, methodically, in parallel straight down the rows of the field toward the Creek.  I am not sure if there was another team or more.  It was a very hot day, but once organized it didn’t take that long.  And the good results could be seen in a few weeks as new corn sprouts came up in previously barren stretches of field. 

It was a great example of farming in older days.  It may seem like a strange story in this day and age, but at the time it seemed like a natural everyday obstacle to overcome on a family farm.  It needed to be done, and, with generous help, we did it.  (I'm sure that Elvis would have understood completely.)  

I feel privileged to have grown up in such a place and time.  We were not pathetically poor but we were certainly not at all well off nor did we consider ourselves ever financially safe.  We were merely a family of small-time farmers, doing what our ancestors always did, living off the soil and raising livestock.  Working to make a life.  It was hard work but a good life.  We were all richer for such experience. 

-Zenwind.
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