FARMING IN GLENN COUNTY
CALIFORNIA
1960 -1966
The trottle was wide open on the old D-7
Caterpillar tractor as it pulled a 14-foot wide chisel plow through the burned
rice stubble and heavy adobe soil. The
black dust would be blowing to the south by the north wind. By the end of the day me and the other cat
skinners looked like coal miners after we took off our eye goggles. All night long I could hear the sound of the
tracks clanging as I tried to sleep. The
next day was the same old thing as we raced to get the ground prepared for
another rice crop. The day started out
with pumping diesel fuel into the tractor, giving it another quart or two of
oil, greasing a few fittings, and cranking on the gasoline-starting engine in
hopes of starting the diesel engine. The
most frequent breakdowns during the day usually involved breaking a hydraulic
hose, or the hitch, or having engine troubles.
Hand tools, a cutting torch, welder, and an assortment of parts were
always in the pickup truck for these repairs.
After the ground was prepared and
fertilized the fields were flooded.
Gates were opened along canals, and pumps were turned on to get the
water through the contour levies winding through the fields. The north wind and rat holes in the levies
would cause breaks during flooding.
These were repaired with filling sacks with mud and placing in the
broken dike. Once the fields were
flooded, planes called crop dusters sowed rice seed. During the summer the water level was
monitored and chemicals were applied by crop dusters to kill bugs and
weeds. (Many of these are no longer used
due to environmental and health concerns)
As the rice would grow in the heat of the summer, we would work with
other crops being raised in various fields scattered around the county. There were beans and tomatoes to plant,
barley and safflower to harvest, and fallow rice fields to work up for crop
rotation.
By the first of September, an assortment
of equipment was in the process of being prepared for the rice harvest in 2 or
3 weeks. There were combines, bankout
wagons and trucks to get into operating order for the big harvest. Also, at this time the water level in the
fields was lowered, and eventually shutoff as the heads of rice started to
mature. As soon as conditions permitted,
the harvest was underway with man, machines, and some luck in order to beat the
fall rains.
No comments:
Post a Comment