Christmas
vacation started for us boys with the Christmas program at school. The program was the day before vacation
started so we could spend the next day dismantling the school stage and
carrying the chairs back down the hill, across Wolf Creek
and back up to the Wolf
Creek school. We cleaned the school and spent the rest of
the day getting our Christmas gifts we made at school for our parents
ready. We had cut a pig bread board out
of plywood with a coping saw and decorated and oiled it.
The next
day started our 2 weeks of vacation. We spent most of it outdoors with
Dad. I am going to give you a look at a
single day on the farm in December 1955.
It started
with Dad waking up at 5:30 am . He already had his long johns on, so put on
his heavy socks, a flannel shirt, his striped Lee Overalls and high top leather
shoes. Next he went into the basement
and put a few pieces of wood in the furnace and opened it up to get the house
warmed up. By this time Mom was up and
starting her morning chores.
Putting on
his canvas overall coat, he turned on the yardlight, put on the 2 buckle
rubbers over his shoes and headed to the barn reading the thermometer on the
way. If it was 10 or above, he would
plan to start the tractor and haul the manure that day onto the field assuming
the snow was not already too deep.
He entered
the barn where the Holsteins were mostly lying
down in their stalls chewing their cuds.
The barn was heated by the 24 cows themselves. Dad regulated the temperature by opening the
silo door a little, the haymow door a little and maybe one of the top halves of
the 4 doors at each corner of the barn. He
aimed for the 50s, comfortable for milker and cows.
The cows
faced each other across the manger. A
watercup was shared by every two cows. Dad entered the barn and turned on the 8
bare lightbulbs that lit the barn up.
The farm didn’t get electricity until 1947. Nails above the walkway behind the cows
showed where the kerosene lantern had been hung. Electricity was still in the early days so
several nights a year the kerosene lamp was needed still. When neighbor Ernest Armstrong turned on his
electric lights for the first time in his barn he exclaimed “there hasn’t been
this much light in here since I put the roof on!”
He took off
his coat, turned on his tube radio to WCCO in time to hear the good morning
song. Sometimes he listened to his
former neighbors, Hank and Thelma on the KSTP Sunrise show. Tube radios lasted only a few years in the
damp barn atmosphere. Dad was trying to
keep up with the Grade A milk regulations.
He had built a separated milk house with water, hot water heater,
washing sinks, drying racks and medicine cabinet. It was the first place on the farm we had continuous
hot water. The house hot water was
heated by a coil in the furnace winters and a special wood water heater in the
summer.
He had a submerged
concrete water tank built in one end of the milkhouse. He sent his milk in cans at that time. He put them in the water tank and pumped cold
water from the well into the tank to cool the milk. Later he used a bulk tank. The milk house was inspected regularly and
had to be very clean. It was against the
rules to open the doors from the barn to the milkhouse to keep it warm in the
winter. He used an electric heater to
keep the insulated building a little above freezing.
Getting the
two Surge milking machines ready was next.
He filled his stainless steel pail with hot water. He brought the milkers into the barn with the
hot water and hooked up the vacuum hoses.
He turned on the vacuum pump and it began its constant chugging sound
for the next 90 minutes. He sucked up
the hot water half into each milker, sloshed it around and poured it back into
several smaller pails for washing the cows.
He next got
the end and middle cows up on the west side of the barn and put surcingles on
each and the cow next to them, looking to make sure he hadn’t marked on the
rump with a big crayon X indicating cow being treated for mastitis—and thus to
be milked last and saved for the calves.
Each cow’s bag had to be washed and dried then
the milker attached, sucking up onto each of the teats. With both machines hooked up the sound of the
Surge pulsators added to the radio and pump “snick chunk snick chunk” The two
never quite synchronized so the rhythm shifted like beats in out of tune instruments.
Cows milked
out in just a few minutes. While they
were milking, Dad would wash the next cow and then adjust the surcingle to put
a little more suck and strip out the last of the milk. Pinching each inflation let you feel the milk
flow and pulling down on it stripped out the last milk. You unhooked each quarter and lifted the
milker with a smooth motion that let you unhook the surcingle and grasp it and
carry both out where you made a smooth gentle toss that laid the surcingle over
the next cow in line. The milk was
dumped into the milk pail, lid put on to keep the cats and flies out, and
milker put on the next cow. The milk
pail was carried to the milk house where it was dumped into a strainer with
milk strainer pad and into the milk can.
When the can was full the next one brought from the rack and the filled
one lifted into the water tank.