Sunday 11 February 2007

WALKING PACE OF YESTERDAY.

Morris Pottinger, Isauld House, Reay, THURSO. KW14 7RW 17.12.06

WHEN FARMING WAS DONE AT A WALKING PACE.

A strange peacefullness comes over the Earth as we approach Christmas and draw breath for yet another year. Here I am in Chicago with my American wife Sharon for Chistmas with her family, and we talk of farming and days gone by and the walking pace of life then. Sharon fastened onto it, said that instead of just talking about it I should write it down for others “lest we forget”. Quite a challenge, but as we talked of farming when I was a boy so many, many uncountable aspects came to light. Walking pace was but one. Many know the phrase today, use it, but of it’s deep original farming origin they know not. It was a marrying of horse and man with a natural matched steady step, the pace of the farm. So we talked, her 12 year old grandson Joseph with us, my own age when still in Whitehall Farm in Stronsay in Orkney before we moved to Caithness in May 1944. My father’s horses came there with us, Meg, Tibby, Prince, others. That walking pace was the pace of life on the farm itself, unhurried, nothing left undone, slow, steady, long working days that yet got all done in proper season.
It often struck me that though the horse was about a ton in weight and we mere mortals a fraction the size, yet we walked together, pace for pace, matched step for matched step. Even the phrase “Matched pair” meant just that, two horses that strode together and together pulled the plough, a natural symphony of movement. When you got a pair of horses that did just that, you treasured them, and they often worked together for many long years, pals.
So many tasks other than ploughing were done by a pair of horses, harrowing the ploughed fields, rolling with one horse per roller, the pair working in tandem and in echelon, their horseman walking behind the first roller and keeping the second on line. The hay was mown by a pair in the reaper, for corn harvest with the binder a pair was often added to by a third to make a stronger team for the harder work. And they had their walking pace, matched again, important. To pull together had a very real and functional meaning. Not every horse fitted. The stooked sheaves were carted from field to the cornyard and again at times we boys led a loaded cart home, and another empty one back to the field, though we were too small to pitch sheaves or build the cart-loads. Sometimes we walked beside the horse, sometimes we were on top of the load with the long reins thrown up to us. It was wonderful to be trusted though the tasks were what we were capable of.
As boys our father often gave us other easy jobs to do with the horses, carting a load of turnips or some bags of feeding oats to the sheep on the Links, going the ten miles from Greenland Mains to Thurso to get cartloads of coal off the train in the Goods Yard, taking the wool bags after sheep shearing to the same Goods Yard, sometimes combining the trip to do two jobs. We boys were not horsemen, but we could do these easier tasks as the men worked at something harder, threshing stacks of corn for example.
We took the horses to the blacksmith to be re-shod, sitting on their bare backs for the miles we had to go, an easy, gentle, rolling pace, soporific, the steady clack of their feet on the unsealed stone road below us. We had to be lifted onto the horse’s back, a mile high, with a wonderful view of our friends as we passed by their farms, maybe a bit snooty!! We took sacks of oats or bere to the meal mill for the attention of the miller. He gave us boys a guided tour of the mill with all it’s magic, the slow-turning, splashing water wheel, the easy moving of clicking or clacking elevators and whispering belts and grinding mill stones and hoists and doors and the fine drift of meal dust whitening everything, the miller included, and the kiln for drying and the wonderful warm smell of the mill. Oat meal and beremeal had different aromas, bere was sweeter than oats. Days later we went back to the mill to collect the finished product, bags of meal and sids and grop, loaded on the carts by stronger hands than us. I left Stronsay when I was 14 so we did these things while quite young, not allowed today of course in this Welfare State, but it was a wonderful education and we so wanted to be grown up, and were so proud when we came safely home job done. Felt grown up too!!
Later at Greenland we had another walking pace. In summer the horses grazed in Learigtoon, the nearest field to the steading. After work we boys were sometimes allowed to take the easier horses from stable to field, some with a halter, some by their forelock of mane, some just walking well trained beside us. Sober in gait and mein as we walked, who would have foreseen the mayhem when they got loose in the field, heels kicking aloft, galloping round in circles just to show us they were not tired after a long day’s work, onto their back’s and rolling from side to side, up again and an almightly shiver or shake as the dust of the day went skywards. They enjoyed it so much. Then, having expressed their independance, they settled down to graze. We had our favourites, and a titbit now and again.
This is but a mere taste of yesterday, a time gone away and fading into the grey past. Christmas seems a good time to write it. There is much more I would like to write about, and hope to. Sharon is good for me, stirring me out of my too long lethargy. The thoughts were there on occasion, but they must be recorded. Wish me luck.

2 comments:

Just Country said...

serenity
I felt as if I were there. Like a shadow on the wall, watching it all unfold. I could even smell the sweetness of the mill.

landgirl said...

Nice juxtaposition of then and now.