This was one of my 2005 newspaper columns.
Our original farm was in two pieces 60 acres ½ mile north of the 40 acres where the buildings are. The home 40 was mostly fields with about 15 acres of swamps and pastureland. Since cows were pastured all summer, we had to drive the cattle ½ mile up the road every morning and then bring them back in the evening to pasture on the wooded hilly 60 acres.
Much of the time
this fell to one or more of we 4 boys.
We would walk along behind the cows or maybe take the tractor or our
bicycle. If it was raining usually Dad would take the car.
The cows knew the
way back and forth. For most of the time
the farmers on each side of the road had fences along the road so unless a gate
was open, the cows couldn’t wander off.
The road was gravel and was at the level of the surrounding land. The cows would walk along slowly eating grass
in the ditches—especially along the swamp on the south end. There was one hill, short but steep.
The road was
graveled with gravel from a local pit.
It was not crushed gravel so had a variety of stones in it. The north end of the road was along a few
small gravel pits on Gullicksons farm.
We could almost always find a few small agates each trip, especially
after a rain.
The fences were
overgrown with brush, trees and grapevines—a nice shady lane. From early in the season until late there
were wild berries and fruit to eat. Heading from home to the pasture, first
came the pin cherry bushes and trees.
Pin cherries are red and very tart.
They were early. We pruned the
trees by breaking off branches loaded with the berries to eat as we went on up
the hill. Choke cherries and goose
berries were July treats. Choke cherries
are good when very ripe and goose berries are good while still green covered
with prickles. Dad liked the black cherries, but they seemed to have an off taste
to me until they were over ripe. In July
the raspberries were ripe. Wild
raspberries are much better flavored than the tame ones. June had tiny wild strawberries along the
edge of the road. Their flavor was exquisite, but they were so small they were
hard to get enough.
Grapes ripened
when the blackberries were finishing in August.
Wild blackberries and black cap raspberries grew on the edge of the
woods or fields. The vines were long and
particularly vicious as they reached over the top of you to grab you from
behind. When we found a big patch of
blackberries in the woods, we would tell mom and we all picked them for days
and mom canned them for winter sauce. While eating wild blackberries it is easy to eat
one of the foul flavored bugs on the berries. You would spit out that handful
and try to look a little more carefully for the next one.
Hazel nuts got
ripe in late August. Picking them when
the husks were still green meant purple fingers. It seems odd how a green plant can turn your
skin purple. I think these were used as
natural dye. Along the north field at
the pasture grew some wild filberts—sort of a fancy hazelnut. They had a better flavor and were fun to
pick.
At the corner where the cows went into the
pasture on the 60 was a brushy area made up of wild plums. They were quite good to eat if they were ripe
enough. The bugs had often ruined most
of them, but if plum looked reasonably good we popped them in our mouth and
spit out the pit. What you didn’t know
didn’t hurt you!
We usually took a
trip down the river road each fall to pick Butternuts. They grow along the St
Croix River . Butternuts are
really good on chocolate fudge candy.
Although we didn’t have black walnuts growing in our area at that time,
we usually made a trip to Uncle Zen Carnes in Iowa each fall and brought back a bushel or
two. They were especially good on
divinity candy with wintergreen flavor. During deer hunting on the barrens in
November, we often saw little green wintergreen plants and berries. We picked them for mom to make flavoring for
divinity candy.
The now dead end road comes out to a modern blacktop road -- the 1/2 mile that twice per day we ambled behind the cows who grazed their way to pasture. |