She Grew Strawberries In Barrels And Broke The Man Who Wanted Her Land-nhu9999 - Chainityai

She Grew Strawberries In Barrels And Broke The Man Who Wanted Her Land-nhu9999

The first barrel fought me like it knew I was desperate.

It was wedged in the lean-to behind a stack of rotting fence rails, swollen from old rain and gray with age.

My father had bought dozens of them for some milling scheme that never became more than a plan.

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After he died, my mother had called them “future usefulness,” which was the sort of phrase she used when we were too poor to call anything junk.

By the spring after she passed, those barrels were nearly everything I owned.

Them, a cabin with a decent roof, a stubborn mule named Biscuit, a cold spring, and four acres of steep Oregon clay that half the Hood River Valley treated like a joke.

I was twenty-two.

I had buried both parents.

And I owed Mr. Alderton at the mercantile enough money for him to speak to me as if he already held the deed.

He never raised his voice.

That was part of the insult.

“A young woman alone ought to be practical,” he told me each time I came in for flour or nails. “That slope will never feed you. Sell before it ruins you.”

He called it concern.

I knew greed when it wore a clean collar.

The spring on my place ran cold even in August. That was what he wanted.

The soil did not impress him.

It did not impress anyone.

Rows washed out there. Seeds slid down the hill in the first hard rain. Anything that survived grew crooked, grit-splashed, and tired.

But my mother had once grown strawberries in a cracked washtub by the kitchen door.

She had lifted them off the mud without ever calling it a method.

They were the only rich thing we ate slowly.

When the Mount Hood Hotel posted a notice looking for clean strawberries through summer, I stood in front of it long after the men finished laughing.

The hotel wanted fruit that was unbruised, sweet, and clean enough for the ladies who came up the Columbia to escape the city heat.

The valley could grow strawberries.

It could not keep them pretty.

They lay on straw, mud splashed them, slugs found them, rain softened one side, and by the time they reached a kitchen door half the flat was fit only for jam.

I walked home thinking of my mother’s washtub.

Then I looked at the barrels.

A barrel could hold better soil than my slope.

A barrel could drain slowly if I bored it right.

A barrel could lift the fruit into air.

By sundown, the first one lay on its side in the yard while I cut planting windows into the staves.

My hands blistered before my confidence arrived.

By the end of that week, I had four barrels drilled, packed, watered, and planted.

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