After a
month of gloomy weather and gloomy farmers the skies are blue and the sun is
hot. When I took my walk this morning, I
could hear it. Above the warble of red
wings and the buzz of dragon flies, there was a faint thunking. A rumble of wheels, a squeaking of grease-hungry
gears. And I’m sure I heard the farmers
laughing as they bumped around their meadows on big tractors cutting swathes
through the grass, raking it into thatchy ribbons and gathering it into
bales. Sweaty smiles and dusty grins are
back. It’s hay time in Highland.
My very
first summer in the mountains, a young farmer agreed to let me ride on his hay
wagon and help with the harvest. I
should have noticed his devilish grin as he advised me to wear shorts and a
sleeveless top for the hot work. I
showed up to his fields dressed in my shortest shorts and a white tank
top. I did at least have sense enough to
wear tennis shoes instead of flip flops.
When I got to the field, he directed me to a long wagon and handed me a
dangerous looking hook. “Use this to
pull the bales out,” he said mysteriously before jumping up on the
tractor. “Saul will show you how.” The wagon lurched forward and I almost fell
on top of my hook as my friend put the baler in gear. Ka- chunk, ka- thunk, ka -chunk, ka -thunk….square
bales started crowding their way up the chute.
Saul showed me how to hook one and drag it over the edge and then grab a
string with my other hand before tossing the fifty pound bale back to him. He stacked the bales, five to a layer, six
bales high as we circled the field.
Each bale that
I pulled out rubbed against my bare arms and bare legs. Within an hour I was polka dotted with hay
pricks. Sweat dribbled down my chest
into the low cut top I had chosen and every itchy bit of grass that came loose
from the bales stuck in a place I couldn’t gracefully reach. We rode around that field for five hours,
filling wagon after wagon. Every once in
a while my friend looked back at me and grinned. “Having a good time?” he shouted over the
roar of the tractor. I was exhausted,
wringing wet, itchy all over, and my hands were raw. To top it off, my bra and tennis shoes were
both overflowing with hay chaff. “Just
dandy!” I called back. So, we kept on
circling what had to be the largest hay field in Highland County. Finally, the last bale was stacked.That night, at his mother’s dinner table which was piled high with good food, I fell asleep in my plate.
When Joe and
I got married, I started riding the wagons with him. His dad, who’d had a stroke, could still
drive a tractor, so Joe and I stacked hay.
In my long pants, high-necked shirt and gloves, I grew to love hay
season. I learned to toss bales without rubbing them against my arms and to
stack bales above my head. I loved
watching the swallows dip and dive catching the rising insects and listening to
the rhythmic, thumping music of the baler.
Now, like
most farmers in the county, we round-bale most of our hay. It’s faster and requires less labor, but we
still square-bale enough to feed to our sheep, and second cutting is always square-baled. Although our two grown boys and my husband
can handle most of it now every once in a while I get a yen to ride the wagons
once again. So, I put on my long pants and gloves and cross the fields. Joe pulls me up and we bounce around the
field stacking, laughing and sweating. It's hay time in Highland and we are grinning dusty grins once again.
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