Thursday, August 22, 2024
A. Senior Citizen
Wednesday, July 31, 2024
Expressions Our Grandparents Used https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07/expressions-our-grandparents-used.html
. "Waking up on the wrong side of tthe bed”........
refers to some who woke-up in a bad humor. Goes back to a Roman superstition that positive forces await on the bed’ right side and bad energy on the left.
"Can't hold a candle”.......... .
Often useed to compare one person’s work with another’s. Gones back to the 17th century and refers to an apprentice being so incmpetent he couldn’t even hold a candle for his master.
Cold feet...........
a term used fur losing interest or backing out of a deal.
Rule of thumb.........
refers to careless builders compared to those who use a square and rule for careul construction. Earliest record of the term’s use is by a Scottish preacher in describing the lack of diligence of some of his church members.
It's comin' a toad-strangler...........
raining really hard
Bury the hatchet”........
When the chiefs of two Native Americans tribes decided to settle their differences and live in peace, each buried a hatchet in the ground..
Have you lost your marbles?..........
you’re acting peculat
I love you a bushel and a peck and a hug around the neck ..............
Everything will work out.
Does that picture look cattywampus to you?............
Is it crooked?
Last time I saw you, you were knee-high to a grasshopper............
meaning you’ve really grown.
I'm as nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room full o' rockin’ chairs.............
no explanation needed
Dannie
Tuesday, July 30, 2024
The FBI ’s Begining
https./rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com2024/7/the FBIsbeginingtpl
In 1900, William McKinley, our 25th President, faced several serious problems... Anarchists, who wanted to bring down the government, and increasing crime. In his second term he was assassinated by an Anarchist and his Vice-president, Theodore Roosevelt, former Governor of New York, became President.
Rosevelt was a strong believer in laws and their enforcement. He appointed Charles Bonaparte, a man of like beliefs, as US Attorney General. Bonaparte soon .discovered he had very few men to carry-out the investigations his job required. He solved the problem by “borrowing” well -trained, men from the Secret Service. This was very expensive, and these men made their reports to their boss, leaving Bonaparte in the dark.
When Congress decided there was no law authorizing this expenditure they canceled the funds After a long and complicated session with Congress an agreement was reached, and funds were made available for the Attorney General to form an investigative force of his own.
The year was 1908. and considered the year the fledgling FBI was born in the form of the Bureau of Investigation. It operated under. this name (((or BOI), for a number of years then changed to the Federal Bureau of Investigation–the FBI.
From a beginning work force of about forty, it has grown to 35,000 including over 10,000 special agents and others with special knowledge and talents.
Tuesday, July 23, 2024
Mothe's Yard https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07/mothes-yard.html
In the 30s and 40s, green close clipped lawns were a rarity. Although lawn mowers had been invented, these were years of the Great Depression and very few people had money for such a non-essential item.
The sandy sidewalk was lined with jonquils, the smaller, fragrant version of daffodils Perennial sweet-pea grew nearby. It was actually a vine, but mother contained it with a wrap of chicken wire to hold its tendrils in a bush-like mound.
There was no place for a vine to grow because the only fence was between the house and the field, and was covered with a trumpet vinevine, and both ends of the front porch were covered with honeysuckle and Seven Sisters rose vines.
It’s an understatement to say my mother loved flowers.
Friday, July 19, 2024
My Civics Class 1941 https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07.html
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
Two Friends
https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07/two-friends.htm
I have been asked to post this spoof again
I have a friend named Bessie Mae, who comes over and drinks coffee with me each morning.We sit around the table with our coffees and talk about our ailments—I’m ninety and she’s eighty—so we have a lot to talk about.
Tuesday, July 9, 2024
Caring Animals
http://rockingwithdannie.blog.spot.com/2024/7/caringanimals.html
Recently, I read a Peta post that stated “all animals have the capacity for thought, intuitiveness, empathy and decision-making That’s an intriguing statement so I checked it out. .” Examples were given.
One, my favorite, tells of a fat, pot-belly pig, named LuLu saving the life of her owner, who had fallen to the floor with a heart attack. LuLu managed to squeeze through the doggie door, cutting her belly in the process, then running to the road and laying down in the middle until someone stopped. Then she led the person to the heart attack victim, saving her life.
So, animals see our dangers and decide what action to take. And it’s not jist domesticated animals....Wild animals are the same. Scores of stories telling about unusual rescues appear each year, especially of porpoises, and even whales, rescuing people who would have drowned otherwise.
Another story, also from Peta, tells of a pride of lions helping police rescue a kidnapped girl. Police were closing in on the kidnappers, forcing them to move. The cries of the 12 year old kidnapped girl caught the attention of the lions, so they investigated. Their arrival caused the men to run away, leaving the girl with the lions. Then the lions did a surprising thing– they sat in a circle around the girl until the police arrived. Then they quietly disappeared back into the forrest.
On the home front, on a cold, icy day, a family friend needed to go out to his farm and break the ice on the water trough, so his cattle could drink. The ice was worse at the farm, causing him to slip and fall. He twisted and turned, but could not get enough traction to get to his feet
He was beginning to worry about his predicament when Wimpy, his herd bull, appeared at his side, lowered his head so our friend could get a tight grip, and was lifted to his feet.
Then, there was a recent story about a dog running fouir miles to get help for a man trapped in his wrecked car.
Animals are truly wonderful, but don’t expect such caring treatment when you meet a wild animal on a hike. They can be vicious.
Sunday, July 7, 2024
Silly Memories https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07/silly-memories.html
A while back, my care-giver and I were chatting and I discovered that her grandfather was an old classmate of mine back in our two-room school days. That was the most exciting thing that happened that day, and brought back a ton of memories.
One day his older sister cane to school wearing a brand new, store bought dress with a sixteen-gore skirt...the latest fad at that time. I renumber it well. It was a blue printed cotton that was selling for $2.98 at J.C. Penny’s. I know, because I checked it out he next time I went to town.
That was beyond my reach financially, so I broached the subject of a sixteen-gore skirted dress to my mother who made all my clothes on her Singer sewing machine. She never used a pattern,,,just laid out the material and cut.
I was disappointed rthat she wouldn’t tackle more than eight gores, but settled for that. Today the old Singer is at rest by a wall in the guest room.
Saturday, July 6, 2024
s https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07/s.html
Summer was snake-time out on the farm. We had a lot of snakes, but only one was poisonous–the copperhead. Easily identified by their copper color and flat heads, their bite is very painful and needs immediate medical attention, possible hospitalization and therapy.
Snakes have no ears and depend upon “hearing” vibrations in the ground to alert them to danger.
Scientist now know they can also ‘hear’ air-borne sounds.
They are rather shy creatures, so when alerted, they slither away to a safer location. Usually, but not always. These that stayed hidden were the ones Mother and I watched for when we did the chores. We carried a sturdy stick and killed quite a few.
After I left home, my parents tore down the old house and built another. Stacks of old lumber made it as far as the backyard fence and remained there for some time.
At that time, they had two dogs that got perturbed at some of the nighttime roamers that came into their yard and would set up quite a racket. One night they seemed especially disturbed, but Dad could see nothing needing his attention so he expected a snake had ventured into the yard, and shushed the dogs and went back to bed.
The next morning, after thinking about the commotion, he decided it was time to investigate that pile of lumber, so he began moving it aside with a long- handled hoe. And when he had finished, he had killed eleven copperheads.
Another time we were visiting and the smaller children were playing on the front porch. One of them came in, big-eyed and excited, and said there was a snake out there in a bush by the porch. My hubby got his .22 and shot that fellow out of his resting place far up among the limbs of the tall bush. Nothing to get excited about–just another copperhead.
A few years back, we cleaned three barns preparing for an auction. They were full of stacked lumber, hay, tools and accumulated junk. We dug–no, I dug, while my husband sorted through the treasures I uncovered, and decided what to sell and what we couldn't do without. I figured I was the experienced copperhead person and would be careful. Husband just didn't take that copperhead haven stuff seriously. So I was very careful and was amazed to disturb no snakes. After the auction and the buyers were carrying away their purchases, two big copperheads came out of their last hiding place and met their end before they made it to safety.
–
Then there's rattlesnakes. A friend who lives in a different area–a rocky, hilly place, was enjoying the fresh spring breezes with her windows opened wide. She walked back to her bedroom and did a double-take. She was staring eye-to-eye with a big rattler sunning itself outside on the window ledge. Nothing between them but a window screen. So far as I know, she's never opened a window for fresh breezes since.
My last snake experience was in my house. One evening I glanced down the hall as I walked by and saw something that looked like a belt lying far down toward the end...yet not quite like a belt, and anyway, there was no reason for a belt to be lying on the floor. Nobody was living at that end of the house. Those thoughts took about two seconds to fly through my mind––then the belt wiggled and in that special, quavery voice that comes out when things are getting out of hand, I called my husband.
"Huh?" he responded from his recliner.
"Snake," I squeaked.
That got him on his feet to come over and make sure I knew a snake when I saw one. After all, he knew I was an experienced snake killer. I was the gal that without fear, had tackled three barns of junk in snake-land, so the panicky call was a bit puzzling.
Well, this was different. Out in the open you can walk away and hope you never meet again. In your house, if you walk away, you can be sure you'll meet again. Your house has become the snake's house, so this snake needed watching.
It was on the move and it had two choices when it reached the end of the hall––the room directly ahead or the one on the right, which happened to be our son's room packed wall-to-wall with junk. If the snake entered that room. we'd never find it. And there was no way I was going to live in a house with a resident snake.
Luckily for us, the snake went straight ahead, so hubby fetched a snake handling tool and with the fellow cornered, the situation was resolved and I still have a home.
A lesson was learned– an open outside door, even one into the garage, is an invitation for a snake to come a-visiting. So even if you're going to be out only a minute of two, close that door. Most likely the snake that ventures in will be a harmless one, but once in, you either remove the fellow or live with the excitement of having a snake slither from beneath the couch or out of your closet, or....
Then there was the time an early norther blew in and we decided to build a fire in the fireplace to take the chill off the room,. The kindling was lit, a couple dry logs were added and we soon had nice little fire. I was gazing into the flames when I saw something waving from the back side of a log that hadn’t yet caught fire. I blinked and pointed. Snake! I hollered. My husband grabbed the little green snake and dumped it out into the yard , where it slithered away. I expect it never again hibernated in a woodpile.
Tuesday, July 2, 2024
Snakes on the Farm https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/07/snake-time.html
When I was a kid, we lived on a farm in what my classmates teasingly called “hoot owl” country. I don’t remember often hearing that lonely hoot, but we must have been the heart of copperhead land. They loved the deep sand and post oak region then.. and now. We had no rattle snakes but could usually count on seeing a cop are posonperhead every day or two...if we were outside.
Mother and I carried a sturdy stick. If you couldn't pound the rascal to death, you could at least scare it away. Dad, with his high topped work shoes, and overalls, didn't bother with arming himself. We knew most snakes are helpful, but copperheads bites are poison and very painful. A bite calls for immediate medical treatment, possible hospitalization and therapy.
So, we tried to reduce population at every opportunity.
Often when walking to school, a copperhead would slither across the road, and we had to let it go its way, hoping it wouldn't be waiting for us some dark night when we were walking home from a school program. Carry a flash light? We didn't have such a luxury back in the good ole days.We had kerosene lanterns for real emergencies, but what kid in its right mind is going to carry a lantern to a school function, regardless of the dark, copperheads, and spooky things. Knowing that snakes “heard” ground vibrations and usually fled possible danger, we stomped our way home Scientist have now proven that snakes can hear air-borne sounds.
After I left home, my parents tore down the old house and built a another. Stacks of old lumber made it as far as the backyard fence and remained there for some time. They had two dogs that got perturbed at some of the nighttime roamers that came into their yard and would set up quite a racket. One night they seemed especially disturbed, but Dad could see nothing needing his attention (by this time their living facilities included things like porch lights and flashlights), so he expected a snake had ventured into the yard, and shushed the dogs and went back to bed.
The next morning, after thinking about the commotion, he decided it was time to investigate that pile of lumber, so he began moving it aside with a long handled hoe. And when he had finished, he had killed eleven copperheads.Another time we were visiting and the smaller children were playing on the front porch. One of them came in, big-eyed and excited, and said there was a snake out there in a bush by the porch. My hubby got his .22 and shot that fellow out of his resting place far up among the limbs of the tall bush. Nothing to get excited about...just another copperhead.
A few years back, we cleaned three barns preparing for an auction. They were full of stacked lumber, hay, tools and accumulated junk. We dug...no, I dug, while my husband sorted through the treasures I uncovered, and decided what to sell and what we couldn't do without. I figured I was the experienced copperhead person and I would be careful. He just didn't take that copperhead haven seriously. So I was very careful and was amazed to disturb no snakes. After the auction and the buyers were carrying away their purchases, two big copperheads came out of their last hiding place and met their end before they made it to safety.
Then there's rattlesnakes. A friend who lives in a different area...a rocky, hilly place, was enjoying the fresh spring breezes with her windows opened wide. She walked back to her bedroom and did a double-take. She was staring eye-to-eye with a big rattler sunning itself outside on the window ledge Nothing between them but a window screen. So far as I know, she's never opened a window for fresh breezes since.
My last snake experience was in my house. One evening I glanced down the hall as I walked by and saw something that looked like a belt lying far down toward the end...yet not quite like a belt, and anyway, there was no reason for a belt to be lying on the floor. Nobody was living at that end of the house. Those thoughts took about two seconds to fly through my mind––then the belt wiggled and in that special, quavery voice that comes out when things are getting out of hand, I called my husband.
"Huh?" he responded from his recliner.
"Snake," I squeaked.
That got him on his feet to come over and make sure I knew a snake when I saw one. After all, he knew I was an experienced snake killer. I was the gal that without fear, had tackled three barns of junk in snake-land, so the panicky call was a bit puzzling.
Well, this was different. Out in the open you can walk away and hope you never meet again. In your house, if you walk away, your can be sure you'll meet again. Your house has become the snake's house, so this snake needed watching.
It was on the move and it had two choices when it reached the end of the hall––the room directly ahead or the one on the right, which happened to be our son's room packed wall-to-wall with junk. If the snake entered that room. we'd never find it. And there was no way I was going to live in a house with a resident snake.
Luckily for us, the snake went straight ahead, so hubby fetched a snake handling tool and with the fellow cornered, the situation was resolved and I still have a home.
A lesson was learned– an open outside door, even one into the garage, is an invitation for a snake to come a-visiting. So even if you're going to be out only a minute of two, close that door. Most likely the snake that ventures in will be a harmless one, but once in, you either remove the fellow or live with the excitement of having a snake slither from beneath the couch or out of your closet, or....
Then there was the time an early norther blew in and we decided to build a fire in the fireplace to take the chill off the room,. The kindling was lit, a couple dry logs were added and we soon had nice little fire. I was gazing into the flamed when I saw something waving from the back side of a log that hadn’t yet caught fire. I blinked and pointed. Snake! I hollered. My husband grabbed the little green snake and dumped it out into the yard , where it slithered away. I expect it never again hibernated in a woodpile.
Monday, June 24, 2024
Schools of my day were vastly different from those of today, But we learned to add and subtract, and to multiply and divide. We wrote curviest and had history and civics lessons.
These insignificant math talents come in handy when the cashier’s computer is down and she doesn’t know how to make change. But of little use when involved with bytes and megabytes.
The two-room schools were actually one long room divided by a folding partition. Each had a huge iron wood-burning stove.
All the school of those days were similar in appearance, with large windows that could be opened for fresh air along each side, a front and back door and a steep roof. We still see them occasionally.
We nick-named the room for the first five grades the “little room.” It was taught by a young woman named Jewel Frazer, and affectionally caller Miss Jewel. By the next year she had married a young dairyman from a nearby community and requested we call her Mrs. Ellis. It just wasn’t the same.
James Harper taught the remaining four grades and was responsible for the school’s activities and problems. The high point of the year was the annual Interscholastic League held in Weatherford. Mr. Harper helped his students chose the events they wished to enter and helped them prepare for the contests.
He drove a two-seated car that was only a few years old so when the big day arrived he crammed in eight or nine contestants and headed for Weatherford.
The athletic events were held at the ballpark on South Main, now the site of the Ninth Grade Center. We parked nearby and wiggled our way out of the car. It became our home base and held things such as lunches and jackets.
We girls entered only the races. Our school was small, so we barely had enough runners (four) for the relays. Our boys participated in more athletic events but shied away from the literary competitions which were held at the high school on Palo Pinto Street more than a mile away. Somehow we managed the distance and schedules and went home with a handful of ribbons.
Another big day, especially for the “little rom” was Inspection Day. That was the day set for the County School Superintendent's visit. It caused a flurry of activity. Erasers were taken outside and pounded until they were dust-free. Blackboards were cleaned, wastebaskets emptied and the floor swept.
One of the responsibilites of the Superintendent was to visit each school to check their progress and help with the any problems. His name was Ivan Stone. I believe his secretary’s name was Mozelle His office was on the third floor of the courthouse. It was a huge room, maybe using the entire floor. At one end were shelves holding thousands of books that were loaned to the county’s schools. They were also available to others, a real boon to book lovers, since at that time, Weatherford had no library.
In1939, the little country schools were merged with larger schools in their district that taught all eleven grades. In my day thats all it took to graduate. That was also the year schools started the twelve year system.
Saturday, June 15, 2024
In Defense of Onions
It’s a real stinker. It’s thin outer peel clings to your hands; falls to the floor, and into open drawers Slicing into it makes your eyes burn and tears flow. It's sulphur content is responsible for the discomfort.
These are small problems compared the benefits. Onions are chock-full of nutrients yet low in calories. They are loaded witonionsh antioxidants, have anticancer compounds, and regulate blood sugar and lower blood pressure They also have antibacterial properties, boost digestive health, strengthen bones, and may help prevent osteoporosis. It challenges the old adage “an apple a day keeps he doctor away,” but who is willing to meet meet the challenge of eating an onion each day!
Onions have been around for a long time Medieval doctors used them to treat headaches, heart disease, and mouth sores.
Somewhere I read that Vidalia onions were discovered in Texas. Unable to find any more mention of Visalia’s and Texas, I decided it was a mistake...until I came across “The Legend of the Texas Sweet Onion.”
As the story goes, back in the 40s, the Bermuda Islands grew a well-liked onion. and were finding it difficult to meet the demand for its seed. And Texas farmers were struggling to meet the demand for this sweet onion.
In those days, the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station was using crossing techniques to improve various vegetables, but had neglected the onion, the main Texas crop, because it was difficult to cross.
In an attempt to meet the farmers’ demands, they contacted New Mexico's Director of its Experimental Station and found he had imported a high yielding variety from Spain from which he had selected a strain for New Mexico and named Bravo.
Texas tried this Bravo in a test field and when the neighbors saw the results they asked for all the available seeds.
Finally, after more ups and downs and more cross breeding, the Texas bred Granex was created and became famous world-wide under different names.
In 1952 a Georgia farmer bought Texas Granex plants for his farm and the Georgia Vidalia was created after being discovering in Texas. The Georgia Vidalia and the Texas Grannex are the same although Georgia claims theirs is better because of the low sulphur content of their soil. Because of this, the State has limited it’s counties qualified to grow and market Vidalia onions
Now that you know there are low-sulfur onions in the markets, pay a little extra and be a happier cook.
A Bad Year For Gangsters
In the 1920s and 30s crime was keeping all law officers, including the FBI, busy During Prohibition, bootlegging (illegally supplying alcohol) ran wild. When the law was repealed, those most dedicated to a life of crime turned to bank robbing.
lBy 1945 some had become notorious.Two especially bad ones were BonnieParker and Clyde Barrow. They and their gang operated mostly in Texas and killed nine law officers and a few civilians. They were killed in Lousianna in 1934. Years after their death, they were romanticized in a ballad sung by British singer George Flake.
Charles (((Pretty Boy) Floyd was another to meet his fate in 1934, He was a back robber and somewhat popular with the public because he often destroyed mortgage papers while committing the robbery. This relieved many borrowers from further payments. He was killed in a shootout with the FBI.
John Dillinger was also a bank robber.. His two escapes from jail made him a popular subject for the media, In 1934 he was killed in Chicago by the FBI after being identified by his escort who who a red dress.
Babyface Nelson (((Lester Joseph Gillis also known as George Nelson) got the nickname “Babyface” because of boyish features and small size. He was hunted as both a bank robber and murderer. His main claim to fame was his association with John Dillinger. He died in1934 in a shootout with the FBI.
With the death of these five criminals, the nation felt relief, but the reign of gangsters was not over. Ma Barker reportedly ruled her sons’ gang ruthlessly and was killed inn 19935. Machine Gun Kelly was still alive, but in jail He and his gang were kidnqpers, among other crimes, and were successful in collecting ransoms from two different kidnappings. He was captured and jailed .After 21years there, he died of a heart attack.
Congress took action in 1934 and passed the National Firearms Act banning machine guns and other firearms adapted to automatic fire.
Thanks to the Lloyd Sealy Library for furnishing this information from its records of the Great Depression.
Sunday, June 9, 2024
Old Friends Are Like Gold....both are worth hunting for
.https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/2024/06/friends-are-like-gold.html
This sweet lady was the baby sitter for our first child...eighty years ago .She was one of six children who lived next door during www11 and had plenty of experienced from caring for her youngest sibling, a little boy a few years older than our child.
When the war ended, our families parted, promising to stay in touch, but failed to do so, as is often the case. So the years went by and the Internet and Google entered my life. so did nostalgia, so I played with my new tools and began a search for anyone with their last name. And I found someone, ‘way up north, the oldest daughter of the family, now listed as the spouse of a fellow with the winning horse in a notable horse show She had married the ensign she was dating while we were neighbored–a nice ending to a wartime romance.
Further googling took me to my long ago baby sitter, all grown up with five daughters and living in California. Several phone conversations folowed as we shared the years gone by.
Another high point was getting to visit with Alice and Louis, her parents and our good neighbor of long ago, at their 50th wedding celebration.
I love Google.
Friday, May 31, 2024
Then one year the back yard was chosen for the annual Easter egg hunt. When the youngsters were turned loose to hunt the hidden eggs they rushed to all the most likely places before spying the old tub lying nearby, slightly tilted with one edge a few inches off the ground.
The little egg hunters rushed in a herd to the tub. When someone lifted it there were no eggs– instead a hive of angry honey bees. The kids learned their little legs couldn't outrun an angry bee and got a few stings. All were soon forgotten as the hunt for more eggs continued. The bees quickly regrouped into a tight swarm and left to form another hive in a safer place.
Bees are important pollinators and today they are in trouble because of something called hive collapse.The cause is unknown, but a widely used insecticide is suspected. Can we help? Maybe. Buying organic fruits and vegatables could help, but the price is often prohibitive. Another way is to contact your congressperson. We can also encourage the growth of wild flowers such as blue bonnets, cone flowers, sunflowers and goldenrod.. Also lantana, butterfly weed and redbud, to name a few. The bee requires a balanced diet just as we humans do.
Assuming that you’ve forgotten your nigh school biology just as I have, the hive consist of three classes of bees: the queen, whose only duty is to lay eggs, the male bees called drones and the worker bees, all female. Besides foraging for pollen which they carry home in little baskets on their legs, and nectar which is carried in special glans, sometimes making ten trips daily, these little females also serve as guards at the hive’s entrance and have hive cleaning duties. It’s no surprise the they seldom live longer than six months.
The more I learn about a hive’s society the more I admire the little bee–.even its grim custom of forcing the drones out of the hive when cold weather arrives.
Saturday, May 25, 2024
SUN-RIPENED TOMATOES
https://rockingwithdannie.blogspot.com/
After tasting a slice of yesterday’s purchase of a clump of beautiful red tomatoes, and finding it to be half ripe and tasteless, I took a trip across the internet to discover what has happened to the tomato of the past.
First, the seed have been modified. Second machines are generally used in harvesting. These cut the plants; shakes off the tomatoes, both large and small–green, barely pink and rotten. All are rolled onto a conveyor belt and carried down to human hands for sorting. It takes a tough tomato to survive all that. A ripe one can’t.
My memories went back to my childhood in the years of the Great Depression when my dad had to switch from being a cotton farmer to a truck farmer. In fact, he had to leave his cotton crop, unpicked, \in the field, because the selling price wouldn't pay for the cost of having it picked.
Today's generation may find the term "truck farming" a bit puzzling, but it's an old term from the 1800s referring to carrying fresh vegetables to market in carts and wagons. This continued through the 30s,"and 4os. with many Model T cars adapted for hauling a load of produce–a forerunner of pickup trucks.
The earliest tomatoes to go on the market brought the highest prices, so my dad planted his seed early in a special bed he built. It had a roll-up canvas cover to protect the young plants from a spring freeze.
Rains don’t always come at a convenient time, so those plants had to be watered by hand with a syrup bucket with holes punched in the bottom for a sprinkler. And the water was pumped by hand, one bucket-full at a time.
Finally, the plants were ready to be planted in the field. A big field. Dad dug the holes; I dropped the plants, hundreds of them, and Mother covered the roots of each one. Some years this system was disrupted by a drouthy spring. Then, water was hauled to the field on a horse-drawn sled, and water poured in each hole.
There was a risk attached to trying for an early crop—Texas weather! Hail or a late spring freeze. There was little a farmer could do to protect a field of young plants from hail, but there were many times we covered the plants with paper tents from old magazine pages. Row after row of plants spaced four feet apart, all needing to be protected from freezing temperatures with paper tents.
After all this troublesome process, the plants begin to bloom and set fruit, and, finally ripen, and be picked by bucketfuls to be carried to a shady spot for sorting and packing.
Our house had a long south front porch, and that was where we sorted and packed the tomatoes for hauling to market. Ripe tomatoes were set aside to be packed in baskets for local sales—one day of shipping and they would have turned nto a juicy mush. Scared tomatoes were not packed for sale. Those were commonly called "cat-faced." I never saw one that resembled a cat in any way, but I suppose someone did at some time. A little rain shower would cause a split in the skin and those were also set aside.
Tomatoes were not tumbled helter-skelter into baskets. They were carefully packed in paper lined bushel or half-bushel baskets, starting with the ones with just a blush of pink, and packed in rings, gradually getting riper as the basket was filled. All perfect. Something to dream of, nowadays, as we visit the produce section of our supermarkets, and pick over ethylene-gassed choices.
That’s the way it was done on our farm ninety years ago.
If you've never picked tomatoes, you may not know that contact with the vines turns your hands a dirty-looking green. And I'll bet you don't know that the best way to remove it is by tubbing a ripe tomato over your hands like soap. Why not wear gloves?. Welll folks, gloves cost money, and a damaged tomato didn’t. In those depression days every penny was saved. So, no gloves.
Ah, the good ole days with plenty of sun ripened tomatoes.