Yeah. That year. |
The hay is being put up here in northern Alberta.
Great, fragrant swaths of it are lying in the field. Great round
or square bales of it awaiting transportation to the stack.
Monster machines cutting or binding or hauling.
How different from the days of my Berg uncles in the 50’s.
One winter in the late 1950’s there was a large accumulation
of snow. That spring, with the abnormally heavy runoff, the Berry Creek was
running higher than normal. About six feet higher.
Now normally, this wouldn’t be a problem.
Except it was haying time.
And my uncles (consisting of eldest--Glen, second--Bern and
youngest--Leif and a hired man--Zoltan) had to cross that creek six times a day
to get to and from the home place.
Not having a boat or barge, they were left with themselves. Uncle
Glen had broken a leg earlier, and with it in a cast, was the only one consigned
to riding a horse, who did the swimming for him.
The rest had to rely on their individual ability.
For Bern, no problem. For Leif and Zoltan—well, let’s just say that looking at
the 40 feet or so of lazily-moving water appeared to those two as a raging
torrent of a half-mile or so.
Now, none of them wanted to swim in their clothes,
understandable because then they’d have to work in said wet clothes. Their
solution? Strip off naked, stuff everything into a burlap sack. Have Bern throw
the sack across the river.
And swim across in the buff.
It worked.
Most of the time.
Then . . . THAT day . . .
Bern was swinging the bag around, trying to get up momentum
to toss it the forty feet to dry safety.
When he slipped.
The clothes, shoes and everything landed in the creek.
Zoltan was nearest.
Remember when I mentioned his swimming ability? Or lack
thereof.
Well, that would matter here.
He decided to alter his course through the water to grab the
bag.
And disappeared.
In a churning mass of arms and legs, he managed to
resurface, but the currant pushed him along and entangled him in a tree.
In the meantime, the bag of clothes was floating merrily
down the creek and was starting to sink.
Picture it.
Three naked men, one seated on a horse and wearing a cast,
standing on the creek bank, staring in horror. A fourth man, also naked, caught in
a tree in the creek.
A bag of much-needed clothing disappearing rapidly from both
view and accessibility.
I just wanted you to catch a glimpse.
Before I told you that Bern, he of the better swimming
ability dove into the murky water and managed to save both the man and the clothes.
And they were able to continue their haying, noticeably damp.
But alive.
The cleanest haying crew ever in the history.
And the luckiest.
Man, those farmers were tough! Every time you write about past times in farming, it strikes me what weaklings most of us are today :)
ReplyDeleteI don't think I could do it. Certainly now!
DeleteAnd posties have a reputation for getting their work done whatever the weather. Farmers make them look like wimps...
ReplyDeleteNeither hail, nor sleet nor snow, nor raging torrent . . .
DeleteIt was one for the memory book and the story is still being told...to an appreciative audience.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Delores!
DeleteI've always been terrified of rushing water like that. I would have sat there until it went down...just ask my husband haha!
ReplyDeleteFarmers make them look like wimps...
ReplyDeleteเย็ดสาว