I lit the too short fuse on the
stick of dynamite and jumped on the idling snowmobile. Dad climbed on behind me and I gunned it
hoping to be far away when the fertilizer-dynamite charge we had just set in
the middle of the cattail swamp blasted it into a duck pond. I swerved to miss a clump of cattails
spilling us onto the ice and tipping the snowmobile over on its side, killing
the engine with only seconds to go before the explosion. “Let’s get out of
here!” exclaimed Dad. I had never seen
him so excited.
Farmers
used dynamite to break fields out of cutover land filled with stumps and rocks.
Stumps had to be pulled, grubbed or
blown out of the ground and then burned. Dynamite was often the quickest way to
break their tenacious hold to the ground. Farmers blasted drainage ditches, created
waterholes, went fishing, and cracked
rocks with sticks of dynamite.
|
Does this need dynamite to open a pond? |
After World
War I (1919) with a huge surplus of explosives left over, the government began
promoting dynamite to clear stumps. For
a few dollars one could buy a case of dynamite with fuses and caps. Dynamite was promoted as the easy way to
clear your land for farming.
Too many
obituaries of the time read like this one “William ______, of Clark County, Wis.,
was instantly killed May 9th,
1912, while at work in a field dynamiting stumps. He had just
placed a charge under a stump and it did not go off as soon as he expected it
would, so he went back to the stump and on his arrival there the charge went
off, blowing off his head. He leaves a wife and family.” Others lost hands, arms and eyes. The
Wisconsin Department of Agriculture working with the University began safety
training sessions for farmers.
Uncle Maurice
was the dynamite expert in the Hanson family.
He did most of the stump blowing. Grandpa’s farm had over 100 acres of
huge white pine stumps to clear when he bought it in 1905. Maurice did the blasting while his brothers
piled the stumps and roots to be burned.
He became very experienced and very careful!
Dynamite came in half-pound sticks. They were
a little larger than an ordinary candle and were wrapped in heavy yellow or red
paraffined paper. Dynamite required an
explosion from a dynamite cap to set if off.
A length of fuse was inserted into the cap which resembled a large 22
shell and carefully crimped to hold it.
One end of the dynamite paper covering was opened to reveal the
explosive material. It was a fine damp sawdust dough like material. A wood dowel was used to poke a hole in the
dynamite and the cap inserted and the paper folded back over the end to make
what looked like a huge fire cracker. Dynamite
fuse burned at a constant rate of 40 seconds per foot.
Instructions
for dynamiting stumps: “Deep oblique
holes are too be made with a round crowbar under the stump singled out for
execution. This hole should be as nearly horizontal as possible and directly
under the stump so that all the explosive force may be expended on the wood and
not on the earth between the dynamite and the stump. The earth acts as a
cushion and the natural tendency of dynamite to exert force downward is
counteracted.”
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The pond we tried to make with dynamite that did not work later was dozed out and a beaver dam restored to make a nice pond. |
The
ponds in our cow pasture all dried up one year in the 1950s. The west boundary of the pasture was Wolf Creek. One hundred feet of boggy shoreline prevented the cows from
getting to the stream to drink. Uncle
Maurice said 100 sticks of ditching dynamite would blow a channel to the creek
and create a waterhole at the hard bank.
Dad and we boys went to J. B. Hanson’s
hardware at Siren to pick up 100 sticks of dynamite, a foot of fuse and a
dynamite cap. Dynamite was available to
people who JB thought were responsible people over 21 years of age and had cash
(dynamiters were not good credit risks).
On a nice
sunny day we boys with Dad, Maurice and Uncle Chan (who lacked excitement in
his life) carried the dynamite back in the pasture. Maurice planned to place the sticks 1 foot
apart in a long row from creek to hard ground.
At that distance each stick would set off the next to make a single explosion
and create the ditch. He poked a fork
handle down into the bog making 90 holes in a row putting a stick in each. At the bank he made several more holes
together to get a water hole. He
prepared one stick by inserting the cap, and a 40 second fuse (1 foot long).
We watched
from a few 100 yards away up the hill to get a good view. Maurice told us to keep our mouth open to
equalize the pressure. We boys opened
them wide with visions of exploding heads.
He lit the fuse and ran to join us.
In 40 seconds there was a tremendous explosion with mud flying high in
the air. We went to the creek and sure
enough, there was a nice 4 foot wide channel coming from the creek to an 8 foot
wide water hole at the hard bank rapidly filling with water. The cows had their waterhole for less than
100 dollars cost.
Since I had seen how dynamite was used by
watching Uncle Maurice carefully, I assumed I too was qualified to use
dynamite. They were just big fire crackers!
Some years later Everett and I wanted a water hole on our sand land. I drove up to J. B. Hanson’s and being 21 by
then, bought 25 sticks of dynamite, 2 feet of fuse and 6 caps. I put about 15 sticks in a bundle in a hole 3
feet deep in the marshy bottom of extinct Sterling Creek, put a foot of fuse and
cap and lit it and ran off. The result was
a nice little pond 15 feet in diameter and 2 feet deep. Nothing to it at all for us expert blasters!
At this
time the federal government was encouraging farmers to make wildlife ponds by
blowing holes in cattail swamps to get standing water. They used a stick of dynamite to set of
nitrogen fertilizer specially treated with fuel oil, much cheaper than only
using dynamite and much more of an explosion. Having the dynamite already, I talked Dad
into trying it on a cattail swamp. We waited until winter when we could walk
out to the center. We knocked a hole
through ice and into the muck below. We poured
our specially prepared fertilizer down the hole and topped it off with a stick
of dynamite, cap and fuse.
We had only 6 inches (20 seconds) of fuse left
so we had our escape planned by snowmobile to get far away quickly from this huge
explosion. Nervously we sped off. I swerved around some cattails spilling us onto
the snow. We righted the Skidoo, jumped
back on, got it started in one pull and were just clearing the swamp edge when
we heard the roar.
It was a
miserably small explosion and barely widened the hole we had made scattering
the fertilizer rather than exploding it.
We hadn’t gotten the instructions right. We had
mixed feelings. Dad was happy it didn’t
go off with us still uncomfortably close.
I was disappointed it failed. The
only effect was really lush cattails next summer.
Dynamite
and fertilizer were used in 1970 by a radical to blow up a building on the Madison University campus protesting war
research. After that dynamite was
limited to licensed blasters and so ended the explosive years for farmers. Like my Uncle Chan, I too sometimes feel the
need for excitement. I miss the days
when a trip to Siren and a few dollars bought the chance to improve Nature with
a big bang!