Every year when spring
time rolls around, my thoughts take me back to daddy and how he loved
planting his gardens. When I say gardens I mean forty acres. That’s
what mama used to call it. He’d start planning his planting and
looking at the signs early as February. If it’d been a mild winter
he’d have the taters, onion beds, cabbage, lettuce, etc. in the
ground by the end of February. If it was a harsh winter and late
spring he’d be chomping at the bits to get it all in the ground,
especially the taters. Mama would tell him, “ye need not fret, them
taters won’t come up none till the ground warms and ye know it.”
And the signs had to be dark nights before he put the taters in the
ground or he’d say, “they’ll be all vines and no taters.”
That meant no full moon or new moon. So he’d wait it out till he
got the chance at it. And he’d stay right with those gardens, nary
a weed was allowed to grow.
My oldest brother helped
him plow out the patches and it’d take em forever to get em plowed.
Daddy had an old mule at one time but when he graduated to a tilter
he didn’t know how to use it. My brother caught on and he mainly
worked the tilter after that, especially after daddy started showing
his age. But that didn’t stop him none. He kept on wanting those
patches planted every year and the more the better. He’d plant
enough to keep an army going, as mama used to say.
We all helped with the
planting and harvesting. I remember many a day planting that corn and
beans and anything else for that matter. I always dreaded it when it
came time to gather the corn out of the field. Man, I hated getting
stung by those pack saddles, it hurt so bad.
He always said there were
good years and bad years for everything. For example, if the cabbage
didn’t do any good he’d say it wasn’t a good year for it. That
meant the weather wasn’t just right or etc. He always watched the
signs and made sure it was a good time to plant anything. He was like
mama when it came to her canning and pickling, especially pickling or
making kraut.
When the cabbage came in
and the signs were good for making kraut, that was an all day job. We
chopped that cabbage with a cream can that daddy would take the top
off and sharpen it really good with a file or sharpening stone. We’d
pack the cabbage in jars after we chopped it fine enough and for
every quart we’d add a teaspoon of pickling salt and a teaspoon of
sugar. Then we’d add warm water straight from the kitchen faucet to
it as we stuck a butter knife down in the middle and around the edges
of the kraut till the water filled to the top of the rim. Mama always
said the sugar was for keeping it white and she always wanted her
kraut to stay white. When the cans were ready we’d help daddy carry
them to the smokehouse cause they had to be put in a cool place to
work off.
He
always planted patches of early corn and beans and late corn and
beans. They all kinda straggled in and we’d break and string beans
in the summer till late into the night. Mama didn’t have anything
but a hot water canner and having to can on a wood cook stove she’d
save the hot water bath till morning.
A lot of the beans were
pickled with corn and put in churn jars to work off when the signs
were just right. We’d mix them all together and put em in the churn
and add a cup of pickling salt for every five gallon of water. Those
beans had to work off for nine days and we’d take em out and put em
in a big pan on the stove and get em hot through and through and put
em in the jars. Daddy and mama loved that stuff but I never did like
em myself.
Daddy’s favorite corn
was hickory cane and he’d plant a whole field of it so we could cut
it off the cob and cream it. Daddy loved that corn with a big slice
of tomato. We liked it too, but he wanted it every meal. The hickory
cane corn was the best pickled with the beans also.
Sinc
e mama didn’t have a
fancy corn cutter she and I used a knife. I’ve laughed so hard at
her when I’d look at her glasses and how speckled they were. Of
course, we were both covered in corn and the whole kitchen as well.
It even got on the ceilings.
When the summer bounty
started coming in it was overwhelming to say the least. There were so
many things that needed canning or pickling and a lot came in when
the blackberries, strawberries, etc. got ripe. I helped mama many a
day stand over that wood cook stove filling cans fast as we could.
The heat was suffocating but as mama used to say, “it’ll beat a
snowball any day.” Of course this would be after we’d hit the
blackberry patch at daybreak. There’d sit the buckets of
blackberries to put up as well. She’d can a lot of them to make
cobblers but she liked to have a few cans on hand just to drink when
someone got the sick stomach. They sure do settle the stomach and I
know firsthand.
After we got a deep
freezer the rest of the berries would be put in the freezer till time
for jelly and jam making. Mama liked to wait and make it in late
summer or fall. She always said it would thicken better when the
humidity wasn’t so high. She never had any trouble with it
thickening anytime best I remember.
All that good bounty sure
did taste good come cold weather and like mama said it sure did beat
a snowball. I look around today and see so many patches empty
compared to back then and it makes me sad. A lot of folks still plant
gardens and we try to put a little one out but as for forty acres
it’s hard to find them anymore.
I bet daddy and all of his
old buddies are planting forty acres in heaven again this spring and
enjoying every minute of it.
© Susie Swanson, 2018
I enjoyed these memories so much. Brought back many memories for me of Grandpa's garden. I surely do remember cutting off corn and it flying everywhere. It was slick, and I dropped and broke a huge mixing bowl full of cut corn in my kitchen floor. I was nine months pregnant and had to wait for my husband to help me clean it all up. What a day!!! I remember when Grandpa went by the Farmer's Almanac for planting advice.
ReplyDeleteSusie, You sound like you were living a pioneer lifestyle. Dang that's a lots of hard work. My parents had little gardens here and there...but nothing like your family. Ted is going to be growing a tomato and a pepper plant in a container...that's our garden of veggies. I see little gardens once in awhile......but in Amish country up north, you'll see many big gardens. I love seeing them. Blessings, xoxo love you, Susie
ReplyDeleteI always love reading your stories and poems. You have a gift for writing... AND your stories always bring back memories for me... THANKS....
ReplyDeleteI talked about a new book you would enjoy reading on my blog today....
Hugs,
Betsy
Wonderful memories, Susie. My parents planted a good-sized garden every year (more like just an acre, though, not 40 like your folks!) I remember my mom canning and freezing the produce that was grown.
ReplyDeleteAwesome blog, i always enjoy & read the post you are sharing.Thank for your very good article...!
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