MY SUBject today is haying in These titles mean nothing.

  • July 10, 2019, 1:20 p.m.
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  • Public

Emphasis on small bales.

I think I did almost all of my hay handling before I started writing on line. It happened after we moved back in 1975 and before we got our first big hay baler in ....... well that’s the problem. I don’t know what we got the first big baler. Probably sometime near the end of the 1980s. We must have had a good ten years of stacking and unstacking hay. I always felt good making hay. It seemed real and sweaty and close to nature. It also made us a family.

I wrote a poem once called making hay on rented land. I searched through the three places I write on line that have search capability but did not find it. I suppose it’s in a notebook somewhere, but that’s way too much work.

I can tell you why I wrote the poem though. Rending land, and farming it, especially hay which is so personal and labor intensive, is a really special thing. There is land you own, land that has been in various forms of the family - and that is special because in a sense - not totally, no one ever really owns anything - it does have a history that parallels your own life. This is the piece so and so bought and paid for with difficulty and so and so hung onto, again with difficulty, and now it’s growing hay for you to harvest.

Every field is special. It has a shape and a border and a set of views that vary with the time of year and the direction you look. Fields are shared with nature - hawks fly over, swallows as well, Rabbits and deer pasture. The sky is a big lid, sometimes blue, sometimes cloudy, sometimes threatening and then delivering storms.

Being able to hay on rented land is like a trip to Europe. The view is different. The fields have different shapes and contours. And the views are exotically glamorous. You’re always grateful to have a new place to work, to share the land’s specialness with those who do own it.

You work with your family. You work with the machinery that all has stories. Things break, Things get fixed. Things work right. There is pattern to loading small bales on a wagon. I asked Jim last night if he could remember how we did it and he was vague. I thought this morning he might have left me a diagram. It’s a little like laying brick, the pattern varies by layer. It’s important to have a balanced load. When I was stacking on a wagon I my loads would tend to get crooked. They were mother lodes. There was a year we had too much hay to put inside the barns and we made outdoor wedding cake stacks of bales.

About half way through our small bale era we got a thrower baler that would punch the bales out of the chute and into a catcher wagon. That technological advance cut bale handling in half. All was left was unloading the mushed up wagons of bales at the barn. It was like doing a crossword puzzle. Easy bales, hard bales. Sometimes one hard bale lead to several easy ones. One day Dale and I were unloading what seemed like many wagon loads of hay. We were maybe a third done with the third wagon. I asked him how many he thought were left on the wagon, He said he didn’t know. Well I know he didn’t know. But he could guess. No guess. So I said one hundred and twenty two. So we started counting the bales as we put them on the slide that lead to the elevator. And guess what? There were 122 bales left on the wagon. Dale is now a chiropractor. His lovely wife, the mother of his two lovely daughters died this spring of cancer. How can those kind of things happen? I do not know.

I miss haying. It had such a rhythm for the summer. You kept at it. You mowed, you raked, you baled, you staked and hauled and unloaded. You drank ice water from the semi-frozen gallon milk jug. When it melted it was warm and still so good.
The sun on your shoulders. The itchiness. The almost sore muscles. The unity of getting it done. Sunsets. Thunderstorms. Roads through the woods to fields on high ridges. The hot hot barn that I almost always managed to avoid. The broken bales you either fed back in to the unbaled windrow or took out into the pasture for the cows and calves. The smell. Hay has this orchestra of scents that all manage to make you happy. The color, the texture, the quality of the hay. It varies my friend. But it makes us happy, not matter what. Those were the summers.


Deleted user July 10, 2019 (edited July 10, 2019)

Edited

Wow, I loved reading this. So many memories you have that I can picture thanks to your words. We didn't hay on our (fruit) farm when I was growing up but we did help the neighbours, and i remember that feeling of sweaty, scratchy accomplishment. So hot! But we pre-teen girls got so fit and tanned lifting and packing those bales. I'm sure you did too!

Telstar July 10, 2019

All I remember about hauling hay was 10 cents a bale - and that included the truck.

Sugar Magnolia July 10, 2019

I love this. It makes me so homesick. It's rare to see square bales in Tx anymore, but when I see a field of square bales it takes me back to the happiest time of my life. It almost makes me itch to think about it lol.

NorthernSeeker July 10, 2019

What beautiful writing and observations. The paragraphs have a poetic organization and would sound great being read aloud. Did you write this for one of your writing groups?

woman in the moon NorthernSeeker ⋅ July 10, 2019

Yes and I read it this afternoon. Haying seems to be a good subject. I could write lots more.

ConnieK July 10, 2019

Absolutely beautiful word pictures. Thank you for the description of the way you live. Our lives are very different and I love the peeks into yours. :)

Marg July 10, 2019

Loved this entry - the imagery was very clear and I could almost see it all happening! I passed some very creative bales of hay the other evening - shaped in the form of the breast cancer symbol of the pink ribbon - quite spectacular but I just hope they don’t distract drivers as the field was at the side of a busy dual carriageway!

Ragdolls July 11, 2019

Loved this. I watch the hay fields here grow, get cut, then the machine that rakes it into rows so that it can be wound up into those large round bales. Use to see the square bales everywhere, now, not so much anymore.

Question: Is the netting material used on the round bales edible or removed before being fed to the livestock?

Katren...In Conclusion July 11, 2019

How is it that your writing lures me into reading and enjoying things in which I would have sworn I have no interest whatsoever?

woman in the moon Katren...In Conclusion ⋅ July 11, 2019

Because, friend, it's life and it's important and it's real. See? I could be a little Hemmingway in my corner of the world. Thank you for your comment.

Purple Dawn July 11, 2019

So beautiful, I wish we could bottle that wonderful smell of haying :)
I hope I have time to go turn some hay with my brother this year, you made me miss it.

woman in the moon Purple Dawn ⋅ July 11, 2019

I love that we share so much.

Florentine July 11, 2019

I grew up in the center of a small town that was ringed by farms so I did no haying myself, but the sun-baked boys with their corded muscles came to school at the end of summer smelling of that distinct sweet, musty scent. Sometimes I get a whiff of it on the outskirts of town when I drive in to visit my parents and I'm immediately 17 and glancing around hoping to catch a glimpse of my crush!

Beret July 11, 2019

I love this entry. Your description really makes me feel like I was there. Thanks!

MageB July 11, 2019

What a lovely experience you have given us. Thank you.

noko July 12, 2019 (edited July 12, 2019)

Edited

I just started reading the book that won the Pulitzer called The Overstory by Richard Powers. Very close to the beginning he writes about a farmer in Iowa and he mentions haying in the same loving way. This part of the story is about a chestnut tree he plants. I had completely forgotten about the chestnut plague that wiped out about a gazillion trees in the Eastern part of the country. It is a beautiful book.

woman in the moon noko ⋅ July 12, 2019

I will look for that book. And mention it to my son. I'm glad you caught the love in haying.

Neogy Titwhistle July 13, 2019

I worked one hay season in Texas in the middle 70's. So hot! Completely tore up my new Levi's.

Serin July 18, 2019

There's definitely a connection to the land from working on it, walking on it. And I'm mostly city boy but I've felt that connection to family of working the ground together, but I can't remember what we were doing.

This is beautiful.

woman in the moon Serin ⋅ July 20, 2019

I'm always grateful for this 'way of life'.

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