The Field They Called Useless Had Been Saving Them For Years-ruby - Chainityai

The Field They Called Useless Had Been Saving Them For Years-ruby

For forty years my neighbors humiliated me for saving my father’s back field.

They called it waste from the road.

They called it a swamp at the co-op.

Image

They called it stubbornness whenever they wanted to sound kind.

I never argued, because my father had taught me that land does not get louder when it is right.

It only waits.

The spring they finally came for it was late April, with the forsythia still yellow along County Road 14 and frost still lifting the shoulders of the road.

I was walking the old push cultivator between bean rows when the three trucks slowed.

The first was Ray Keller’s green Chevy.

Ray farmed the section north of mine and talked about acreage the way some men talk about bloodlines.

The second truck had seed-corn mud flaps and a driver who never bought coffee without telling the cashier about diesel prices.

The third was a flatbed running empty.

They slowed enough for the laughter to travel cleanly across the ditch.

One of them asked if my tractor had died.

Another said my father would rise from the grave and beg me to buy something with a motor.

I kept walking.

The cultivator was steel, old, and plain.

It opened a three-inch furrow without complaint, which was more than I could say for most men.

My farm was forty-four acres.

In Calhoun County, that made me either a hobby farmer or a warning sign, depending on who was talking.

The neighbors ran six hundred acres, eight hundred acres, eleven hundred acres with loans stacked high enough to cast shade.

They planted sealed bags of seed and hired consultants from Des Moines.

They had yield monitors, anhydrous tanks, and pickup seats warm from driving to meetings about efficiency.

I had twenty-two acres in beans and twenty-two acres in native grass.

That back field was the insult they never got tired of.

From the road it looked rough.

From the road it looked idle.

From the road it looked like a man had given up and called giving up conservation.

My father had pulled that ground out of row crops in 1961 after a wet spring peeled the topsoil off the lower third and left gray hardpan shining through.

The county men told him to tile it hard and keep planting.

My father took one look at the exposed clay and did something that made every neighbor laugh at him for the next ten years.

He planted prairie.

Big bluestem.

Indiangrass.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *