They Mocked Her Clover Seed Until The Drought Proved Her Right-nga9999 - Chainityai

They Mocked Her Clover Seed Until The Drought Proved Her Right-nga9999

At eighteen, the county seed dealer laughed at my clover seed.

His name was Gerald Stokes, and in Pottawattamie County, Iowa, men listened when he talked about corn.

He knew every farmer’s acreage, every yield rumor, every new hybrid, every weather complaint, and every old prejudice that passed for wisdom at the co-op.

Image

I knew all that when I walked in on a Saturday morning in May of 1987.

I had gone there for a parts order for my father.

The bag of red clover seed was in the truck bed because I had bought it from the extension office on my way home from Iowa State.

Fourteen dollars.

That was all it cost to become the joke of the room.

Gerald saw the bag through the window and called my name like he had spotted trouble in a church aisle.

“Claire Halverson, what in the world have you got back there?”

I told him it was clover.

The room paused.

Then Gerald laughed.

It was not a surprised laugh.

It was the kind men use when they want everyone else to understand that a girl has stepped outside the fence.

He wiped one eye with the heel of his hand.

“Quit this nonsense, or you’ll cost your daddy the farm by harvest,” he said.

I was eighteen, which is old enough to be furious and young enough to feel your face betray you.

My hands started to shake around the cardboard box of parts.

I made them stop.

I said nothing.

Then I drove home and planted anyway.

My father, Dale Halverson, had given me the back forty because it was the safest place to fail.

It was low ground, tight ground, stubborn ground, the kind of field a farmer discusses with a sigh.

He did not say he believed in my idea.

He said if I made a mess of the corn, we would not do it again.

That was as close to permission as a careful man could get.

My mother, Ruth, understood before he did.

She had watched pasture ground with clover come back thicker after hard years, and she had the quiet patience of women who notice what louder people miss.

She stood at the sink the night I opened my notebook beside my father’s coffee cup.

I talked about organic matter.

I talked about living soil.

I talked about bacteria, fungi, roots, water, and nitrogen.

My father looked at me like he was deciding whether college had sharpened me or ruined me.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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