In Our Hands

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

There is an old photograph that we have hung in our home that shows my Great-Grandparents on their wedding day. They were married in a double ceremony; Mamie and Nellie, maternal cousins and their two new husbands, Harry and William, names that have been passed down to both my father and my youngest son. They are dressed formally; simple white gowns for the ladies, dark suits for the men and all of them wearing gloves.

My Great-Grandfather looks so much like my oldest son it is almost scary, more than a century between their births, but it is the hands that stand out to me, huge in comparison to the hands I see on men today, from work, no doubt, but inherited I assume from generations before him and so much like my own. He wears a look of sober intensity that I have tried to emulate all of my adult life but which now comes to me without effort.

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On their happy day, there was a serious note that ran beneath the surface of their obvious joy, the world they faced changing as rapidly to them as ours seems to me I would suppose. Behind them sits a buggy hooked to invisible horses just out of frame, and it portends to things every time I gaze upon it. Separated by so much time, but linked as closely as if we were in the room together, which we are in a way.

I gave up using work gloves a couple of years ago. Before then I would buy between three and four pairs of them every year, a brand called Ironclad Ranchworx that were made of leather and nylon that fit well and were both tough and flexible. Most work gloves are either too generic fit-wise, having the feel that they were designed by a robot that had been given coded instructions on what hands were without ever having seen them. Each finger was roughly the right size and shape and the dimensions were almost hand-like but it was closer to the way a pair of pajamas feel as opposed to long johns; loose, comfortable, but not really made for the job.

The Ranchers had reinforced leather tips and palms, plastic guards built into the knuckles, and they came in extra large to fit my oversized hands and they looked good, black nylon webbing between a butterscotch colored leather body. For the first couple of days they’d be stiff but depending on the work I was doing they’d break in quick enough and before long they would lose the rigid, new feel and turn into a second skin. Within a month they’d develop holes in the fingertips of the middle and index fingers as well as the thumb so I’d wrap a couple of turns of duct tape over the tears and worn spots and keep on using them for as long as I could, replacing the tape when I needed to.

When I wasn’t wearing them I’d stuff them in my back pocket and if I was lucky they’d be there when I reached for them later, but if I’d lose one along the way it’s orphaned mate would be tossed into a wire basket in the barn and I’d pick up a new pair to replace them and start fresh. In this way, there were always a dozen or so well-worn, odd men laying around to do double service if I required them or if someone came around to lend me a hand with farm work and wanted a pair to use.

When I was seven years old a family friend gave me a Swiss Army knife for a present. If you’ve ever known any seven-year-old boys you’d know better than to hand them something like a high-end cutting instrument packed with accessories. It came fully loaded with two cutting blades, one longer than the other and both honed to a razor’s edge. It had a flat tip screwdriver/bottle opener combination, a Phillips head screwdriver, an awl, a small saw blade, a cork screw, and scissors, as well as a small plastic toothpick and a pair of tweezers tucked into slots at the end with a little ring projecting from its that you could hang from a chain or a lanyard.

It was enamel red with a silver cross embossed on one side surrounded by a shield and it was the only gift I received that year that I can remember to this day. After the friend left our house my mother placed it on top of the refrigerator with the admonition that I was never to use it without permission and only under adult supervision. That warning was effective until my mother left the house to work in the yard and determined to make a piggy bank out of an empty Clorox bottle, I scaled the kitchen counters and retrieved the knife from it’s hiding place. I still have a clear view of that knife in my hand, holding the bottle by its slender handle with my left hand and pushing against the curved surface of the plastic container in an attempt to pierce the vessel.

There is a part of me that can almost recall the way the blade slid at an angle, caught the tip of my pinky finger right where the nailbed ended and sliced down to the second knuckle peeling back a flap of skin that rolled away from the bone itself, revealing the pale yellow periosteum before the blood began to flow. I howled, dropping the knife and the bottle on the linoleum floor, splatters of crimson falling with them and ran for the door. I grabbed my finger tightly but the blood, oily and hot poured through my little fist and soaked my shirt front and by the time I found my mother crouched in the garden I must have looked like I’d been stabbed by an intruder.

She scooped me up in her arms, wrapped a dishtowel around the maimed digit and together we sped off to the nearest help she could think of; the State Police Barracks a mile and half down the road. It was a Saturday, and the only person in the building was a tall, crew-cut wearing Statie with a serious look on his face as calm as if it had been his fifth mangled finger of the day. The nearest hospital was in Princeton about a half hour away and if my mother had driven there instead I would have received at least a dozen stitches, but the trooper was one of these down to earth, grizzled vet types who had probably charged onshore at Anzio or Tarawa and he treated the wound himself, cleaning it, replacing the flap of skin across the knuckles and bandaging it firmly while my mother watched, grim-faced.

She told the story about the knife, about my disobedience and I tried to fill in with as few words as possible and only when prompted. When he was finished he told me to follow him and I rose dutifully, the creak of his leather belt and holster filling the room as he walked. He took us into the garage that connected to the barracks and when he flipped on the light there was, in the middle of the floor, a crumpled and bent Schwinn bicycle laying in the middle of the floor, a bloody sneaker laying next to it. He gave me a good long look to let it sink in. There may have been other things in that room, but that was all I can recall and when he finally spoke he was grave and his voice was slow and measured.

“The little boy that owned that bike didn’t listen to his mother. The next time your mother tells you something, you’d better obey her.”

He flipped off the light switch and we turned back to the lobby and before we left he handed me a dog-eared Lone Ranger comic book and ruffled my hair with his giant hand. My mother thanked him and I mumbled my own thanks as well and we went home to clean up the mess I had made.

It took a while for my hands to toughen up without the gloves, but they did. It saves us about $150 a year to do without, not including the duct tape. I still wear them on occasion, when I pull barbed wire or split cord wood, but for everything else, it seems like a good mix of callouses and caution do the trick. I will still pick up a splinter every now and then, but always as a result of carelessness- brushing sawdust off of a board, feeling the grain of a fencepost, those kinds of things.

There is a learned behavior that only follows injury and pain, cannot be learned any other way and it is as stern a teacher as that State Trooper was in that cold garage next to the barracks in 1967, leaving an indelible memory that saves us from future pain. The palms of my hands are so deeply creased and lined that they look like a Dorthea Lange photo and in the center of each I have begun to develop Dupuytren’s contracture- Viking’s grip as the old timers used to call it. The hands slowly, inexorably over time turn in on themselves.

The fingers curl as the pretendinous bands develop a thickening from wrist to finger tip, palmar aponeurosis is the medical term but the result, absent the Latin terminology is simple- the hands become permanently bent as if perpetually grasping an invisible tool. As old age advances and the muscles weaken but the genes remind the working end of the man that his labor is still required. The endless hours, years, centuries and eons of holding one instrument after another, knives and swords, scythes and oars, rakes, dibbles, shovels, knitting needles, bodkins, hammers, awls, rods, pitchforks, cudgels, saws, axes, all mark an impression, not only upon the flesh, but the DNA of one generation after another.

My father ‘s hands, like his mother before him, my uncles and my aunts, my cousins and one day my children I suppose are marked like Cain, not upon our brow but in our hands. I can still see my grandmother, in her 90’s hunched over a colander at the kitchen sink, peeling potatoes for our supper with hands as gnarled as oak trees on the hilltop, working her paring knife like a surgeon.

Last night before bed my son and I lay together in silence reading books. Every so often there would be the soft whisper of a page turning, a quiet laugh would escape from his lips and then there was no sound but the muted click of the clock on the shelf ticking off the seconds of our life. After a while he sighed and yawned and rolled over towards me and I lay my book down on the bed marking the place where I paused. He leaned in with his eyes closing and placed his hand in mine. He traced the scars and the callouses and measured his fingers, unmarked and smooth against my own, swollen knuckles and skin going to paper across the bones beneath. Neither of us said anything and slowly with no effort at all, he fell asleep while I watched him.

My mind covers a lot of ground at night before I drift off, what I have done or left undone. I catch glimpses of the past as they creep along the periphery of my thoughts and I can feel my own body longing to let go, to give in to sleep and the rest I have worked for all day long. There are plenty of concerns these days that have nothing to do with my own mortality, that’s a comforting shore I can almost see in the distance and I’m sure that like the sleep that lies ahead it will come on me as easily.

The things I dwell on these days revolve around my children and the world they have come to inherit and all the complex and divisive issues that they entail. I know what goes on in the cities and in the larger world around me even if I don’t live in that place and I fully comprehend what it means for my children, but it is out of my hands. So in the meantime, I do what I can with my own two hands, twisted and covered with scars and realize that they were meant for this work. They are designed for holding tools and shaping a future, but they also hold the past as tightly as it holds me.

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53 Comments
TrickleUpPolitics
TrickleUpPolitics
February 4, 2017 11:21 am

Beautiful. Thanks for sharing.

kokoda the deplorable
kokoda the deplorable
  TrickleUpPolitics
February 4, 2017 12:00 pm

Yup

Crat
Crat
February 4, 2017 11:37 am

Thanks for that, brought back memories of misadventures.

Out of curiosity, have you read Epictetus?

Uncola
Uncola
February 4, 2017 11:52 am

Wow…. Just wow.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
February 4, 2017 11:55 am

This place is a mystery sometimes. From moments of insanity, hilarity, and craziness to moments of complete and utter depth and clarity. It always amazes me. I think a lot about time, the past, the present and future. About work and sleep, worry and rest and how the micro is really just a model or prelude to the macro. You’ve summed all of that up (and more) beautifully in one essay. Quite a feat and probably one your most poignant and important essays yet.

One day you’ll need to take these pieces and put them together in the form of a book. You could call it “Reflections of a Hardscrabble Farmer” or some such. I know I’d buy a copy.

Ottomatik
Ottomatik
February 4, 2017 12:25 pm

My first decade in the work force I learned carpentry, no gloves, something uniquely satisfying about the ‘feel’ of the wood. Each type had its own character one could literally feel from the softest to the hardest.
The last couple of decades I have switched to sheet metal, an unforgiving material for my hands. Whereas wood gradually strengthened my hands, sharp sheet metal edges only damaged them.
For me, wood will always be more romantic, steel more sensible.

Rojam
Rojam
  Ottomatik
February 5, 2017 8:06 am

For some reason your comment didn’t come to my attention until just now. Thought I read them all. Anyway, I’m really glad I came upon it and enjoyed your descriptions of the various materials you have worked with. I have been a machinist for the past 38 years and have worked with a wide array of materials, too many and boring to list, cutting oils and coolants. While my woodworking has been limited to household chores, I never really thought much about how differently they made my hands feel. It seems stupid but It just isn’t anything I gave much thought about. My hands are gnarly. Quite ugly, honestly. My feet even worse. Let’s not even go there! I wonder how differently my hands would be if I would have spent a lifetime working with wood. Gee, this article and comment thread has made me reflect upon things I normally don’t reflect about. You’re dead on about sheet metal, btw. A real pain in the….hands!

Mongoose Jack
Mongoose Jack
February 4, 2017 12:25 pm

Nicely done. And oh what a story those old photos tell! Your musings and observations…..I can only nod to affirm.

razzle
razzle
February 4, 2017 2:40 pm

I will always be grateful to have been manhandled by your generationally formed hands and thoughts.

/salute good sir… and I pray you continue to read to them at bedtime, and get the chance to do so with grandchildren, in direct opposition to tablet imposed Netflix.

Sionnach Liath
Sionnach Liath
February 4, 2017 2:51 pm

I Am a lot closer to that “comforting shore” than you; my next birthday will mark the completion of 78 years. Yet I still look forward to getting out in the yard or the woodlot and “doing” as I have for so long, even with gnarled and bent hands.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
February 4, 2017 4:18 pm

The main theme is hands, to be obvious. HF says his hands grasp the past and can’t let go, sort of like holding on to a live wire.

We were laughing at the way my grandson’s hands flung around wildly, his brain hadn’t made connections with the wires to his hands. He gained control rather quickly, it must have been only two weeks later that he could make rudimentary use of those tools.

Hands are the extension of our will, they gather, grab, pinch, squeeze, feel, sense, and the rest of things, the brain catalogs by how it feels to the touch; soft light, grating noise. Eventually, the tools wear out, you can’t pick up coins, you develop a liking for large tools you can grasp instead of the watch repair tools you could use at one time. Woodworking requires very good hands, well trained with the right connections, no one yearns to build fancy furniture out of metal.

It’s the hand we’re dealt, you gotta play it. There’s no escaping that so-called mark of Cain. He was a farmer, a founder of cities. A man who worked with his hands, a man who cut himself one day and found that he had the surgeon’s inner hands, inner strength to spill blood. Which is a little hard for most folks to do.

It isn’t a bad thing, the Jews had to sprinkle blood on everything to sanctify it. Without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sins, you can’t just let them go. Women bleed and are thus renewed. Men have to tend to the garden of the lord.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  EL Coyote
February 5, 2017 10:11 am

I always look forward to your take on the things I write. If psychiatry weren’t a racket designed to drug people and keep them in treatment for the rest of their lives, it would look a lot like your analysis. I actually come away from your comments understanding myself better than I do when I’m writing one of these stories. Thank-you, as always.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2017 11:12 pm

HF, as Dr Frederick said about a crown he was putting on an old filling, “You make a tough job easy.”

And don’t think I don’t enjoy the therapeutic value of this joint. It is hard to find smart people to talk to and get a worthwhile response. About the most you can get from live folks is small talk. Women like to dissect your conversation real-time (it’s quite irritating). Guys just want to talk shit.

Nobody wants to face the real issues and if they do, they are well aware of the politically correct position on any issue. That’s all you get. Sort of like the canned dinner Admin posted on a Friday Fail – the pic on the label looked alright but the stuff that came out of the can was not very appetizing. I mean that if they have an opinion, it doesn’t come out neatly like a steak dinner, it comes out like a horribly abused lasagna.

Dixie
Dixie
February 4, 2017 4:44 pm

Thanks, Farmer, for evoking an outpouring of memories: Pains, pleasures and lessons learned.
Those of us closer to the end than the beginning all have them. Some are simply better able to put the words together than the rest of us…
I learned about gloves as a lineman. Headsets at the range. Glasses with a nail gun. It all came together when I got smart and went to work as a Firefighter/EMT. Learned a lot of those other lessons there like that one the trooper taught you, too.
Jewell’s video entre brought those years back to me before I even got into the meat and potatoes of your offering for today.
She’s done some acting, too. If you get a chance, rent, “Ride With The Devil” from Netflix. She does a great job with her character in one of the best films on the *War Between the States* ever made, in my humble opinion.
She sings a very haunting accompaniment to the closing credits, too.
Only three of my six grandchildren are close enough for me to have a hand in raising.
There is so much potential in this land. We’ve made a grave mistake in allowing the multi-generational family farm go down the memory hole.
Keep up the good work and keep sharing with us. I hope to meet you up there in the Granite State when I come up to visit my sister this coming summer.
Stay active and stay safe!

Sami Jim
Sami Jim
February 4, 2017 6:25 pm

Thank you.

PatrioTEA
PatrioTEA
February 4, 2017 6:57 pm

What a fabulous article, extremely well written. You are no doubt a good farmer, and we should all appreciate and applaud that; but I wonder if you didn’t miss your greater calling as a writer;…or do you regularly do both? Thanks again for sharing that wonderful story.

Rojam
Rojam
February 4, 2017 8:19 pm

What a beautifully well written look back in time. When you described laying with your son, his hand in yours, it took me back to an incident almost 55 years ago. It’s something I can no longer share with the only other person who would remember it since he passed away a shell of a man he once was 10 years ago. His frame shriveled and curled. His mind in another place. How I wish I could write as beautifully and vividly as HSF but it’s something I would like to share. (What the heck, right? If people don’t like it they can give me a thumbs down and stop reading). I never discussed this incident with him because…..well…who am I kidding? There is no good reason and I regret that greatly!

My father was old school. Not saying that is good or bad. Just a fact. I just recently told the story how he bought a car when I was 16 without me knowing anything about it and informed me that I had just paid half for it. Or the time I was 7 or 8 and when he found out I needed left handed scissors for school because the teacher saw me cutting left handed and it was more expensive than the right handed one’s he had purchased earlier, simply told me; “starting tomorrow you’re right handed.” That’s the way it was. He was a good father but just old school. He never spanked me or laid a hand on me. Didn’t have to. His look said it all. He’d get in my face when I was a teen and even when I knew it all, his 6’4″ stare looking down on me was all that was needed.

It goes without saying that my father never told me he loved me. No, no, no! That’s ok. I know he did. (Dad’s who have several younger children at home don’t take time off work to watch their son play college baseball if they don’t love them. Dad never missed a home game and even traveled to other states when we played away games). It’s just not something we discussed. While I tell my 26 year old son I love him and will never stop, it just wasn’t Dad’s style. Not his thing. I remember having a minute alone with him on the day of my wedding. I was dressed in my tuxedo waiting for my best man to pick me up, standing outside. Dad came out in his tux and quite sheepishly I started to tell him how much he meant to me. He waved me off. “I don’t want to talk about it,” he bellowed. But it was too late. We both knew without another word spoken. He didn’t want to talk about it because it would be a sign of weakness if I saw him get choked up or, heaven forbid, shed a tear. I was relieved that our “conversation” ended. I didn’t want to really talk about it either.

Now for the incident about hands. When I was 7 I remember Dad taking me to a baseball tryout. It was at the local elementary school I attended. We walked there and I remember Dad taking my hand and holding it. Not just when we crossed a street, but holding it the entire way. His hand was rough. Very rough from the outside job he had. I remember vividly how good I felt. How happy that short 3 block walk felt holding my Father’s hand. It was 54 years ago but when reading the above story it felt like yesterday. I never remember holding Dad’s hand again. I guess it just wasn’t his style. Except that one never forgetting, happy time.

Thank you HSF for bringing back a wonderful, long ago but never forgotten memory. By the way; I still cut right handed. Thanks Dad. You were right!

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Rojam
February 4, 2017 11:37 pm

That’s just the kind of world it was back then. I was thinking a while back about how men in the movies would settle things like the Duke.

They would slap women and punch punks at the drop of a hat. Their speech was like Bogart’s.

It was a different land back then. There were no safe spaces, no banned words, no laws against spanking or wife-beating. No laws against drunk driving, there were no seat belts, no social safety net, no mercenary forces, and very little displays of affection.

TPC
TPC
February 4, 2017 10:34 pm

I’m a simply put together man of almost plain features, aside from my blue eyes and curly hair you’d be hard pressed to remember much about me if we shared time in an elevator.

One thing that always grabbed attention were my hands. I’ll never forget the first time my sweetie discovered how rough they really were. She scratched herself just trying to grab my hand to get my attention. Hell, we weren’t even dating. It surprised her so much, all she could do was roll my wrist over, and marvel at the damage I lived with. She asked permission to touch, and all I could do was shrug. They were just hands, who cares? Her touch was so light, if I hadn’t been watching I would have never known she was tracing my hands. Her fingertips lightly followed the scratches, scars, and odd bits of metal and wood that crossed my palms and knuckles. A lifetime of manual labor had made them tougher than the best of gloves, and given them that “baseball glove” look as the muscles between the thumb and fore-finger thickened year after year.

I couldn’t quite crack a walnut, but that’s the direction I was headed. I worked at a lumber yard and used to amuse classmates by cutting splinters out of my hands with my leatherman.

As the years rolled on I took a desk job, one that helped my resume if not my physicality. The callus was the first to go, a protective shield of visible experience and work that still makes me feel naked by comparison. My scars were the next to go, as my hands softened they allowed those memories to fade not just in mind but in body. Last was the muscle, its been over 10 years now since I left manual labor forever, and the strength these hands once possessed is nearly gone.

Its like losing a part of myself. When I do home repairs I still grab ahold of torn up wood like my hands are impervious to harm, only to have to deal with a deep splinter immediately. Where once my hands like vises let me swing a hammer for days on end, they are now sore after only an hour or two.

I’ve lost a piece of myself, HSF, a piece I long to recover more than just about anything. I still have the muscle memory. When I work in the plant the guys on the line would rather me than just about any other: no fear, and I know how to help without hindering (anybody who has ever trained a newbie knows what I’m talking about). But I don’t hit the site and immediately make my presence known. The years of time spent at a desk or a lab bench have almost completely eroded all traces of that reliable brute of a child, the one with shoulders and hands like a man three times his age, and a practicality defying modern PC bullshit. Just another office worker now, though one with some ‘street cred’ in manufacturing, at least that’s something I guess.

Your posts always make me take a few minutes to muse on what life is like outside these walls. The kind of joy that comes from simply reversing misery. There is no better feeling than a warm meal and a roaring fire after a day spent working on a cold and rainy spring day. The kind that seeps into every piece of you, and even makes your bones chatter. That’s happiness, shit like that is what life is about.

Dammit man, I can’t afford a farm yet. Not at the prices our current economy demands. Can you can it on the nostalgia? If my wife has to listen to me reminisce one more time she’s liable to buy me a cord of wood to split just to spite me 🙂

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  TPC
February 4, 2017 11:11 pm

I noted HF said his grampaw looked like his son. This is reversing the order, as Admin said – it should go from the general to the particular. In this case from elder to youth. But you have to recognize it has more impact that way. It makes you see that proverbial truth that there is nothing new under the sun, and it happens in families that the names, faces, expressions, tics, vices, diseases and lifestories repeat.

TPC
TPC
  EL Coyote
February 4, 2017 11:54 pm

Lol.

More seriously though, I never really developed the habit. When I was younger it wasn’t plausible, and like smoking it just seems like if you don’t start young you never start at all.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  TPC
February 5, 2017 12:00 am

It was a cheap shot I usually reserve for newbies but you were wide open, man. Thanks for being grown up about it. Brian would have called me a fag.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  EL Coyote
February 5, 2017 2:00 pm

Maybe I’m missing something, lost in translation, so to speak. The boy represents life and the picture is but a representation. Nobody would say, you look like this crayon drawing. Rather, you say, this kid’s drawing looks like you.

HF is seeing how the old photo looks like his family. The old cart in the background represents a sort of Pilgrims Progress, both in the comparison in time – from old cart to modern car – and a comparison with the story of a man burdened by sin who leaves the city of destruction seeking the celestial city.

I don’t know, this is a tough one.

MMinLamesa
MMinLamesa
February 5, 2017 4:25 am

Nice story-weaving the imagery of the hands with your dad was well done.

Stucky
Stucky
February 5, 2017 5:37 am

A goddamned SCAR??!! That’s what is being posted on TBP these days? Scar tissue!! Who the fuck writes about a scar, anyway.

Oh. Hardscrabble Farmer. I see.

This is why I’m envious of that sumvabitch. I have scars. Plenty of them. Do I write about them? No. CAN I write about them? Noooooooo! Not in a million years.

Absolutely terrific story.

I hate you. Sometimes. Briefly. 🙂

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
  Stucky
February 5, 2017 10:01 am

Stucky,

You don’t write about them but you wear them well. Carry on.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Stucky
February 5, 2017 2:02 pm
Old_Salt
Old_Salt
February 5, 2017 7:56 am

“There is a learned behavior that only follows injury and pain, cannot be learned any other way and it is as stern a teacher as that State Trooper was in that cold garage next to the barracks in 1967, leaving an indelible memory that saves us from future pain.”

I wonder if so much of the daily chaos could be pinned to a generation or so of children who have been over indulged, and utterly sheltered from these sorts of hard lessons.

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
February 5, 2017 7:57 am

El Beaner, yer missin the gawd dammed pernt. This whole essay (poetic fer sure) kin be boiled down ter this:

‘Me, mah great grandpa and mah son all have enormous dingusses’.

Big weiners kin git yer inter all kinds uh places (see the White House) but I ain’t sure it’s appropriate ter try sneak this one in Hardscramble. We all pretty much assumed yer Herman the one-eyed German was decently big, but shitballs uh mercy, some things is left better ter our imagination. Plus, Admenstruater might git pissed since his hands is a very soft and so small he kin barely handle uh remote control.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Billah's wife
February 5, 2017 2:06 pm

Actually, I was right on point when I said that the onliest time TPC gets a splinter in his hand is when he’s choking the chicken. In both instances, I had the Viking grip image in mind. However, I deleted it because Martha. She keeps a sharp eye out for me and you messing up a HF article.

Uncivilized
Uncivilized
  EL Coyote
February 5, 2017 2:15 pm

Martha don’t be likin da splintas in da hands, da chokin of da chickens or da sniffin of no asses. No sireee. Not on no Hardscrabble threads.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Uncivilized
February 5, 2017 3:17 pm

Amazing how you could smell the manure and horse piss on Stucky’s horsey article yet HF makes farm life sound like a walk in the park.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Uncivilized
February 6, 2017 9:27 pm

Hey, Uncivil, was it you that spotted a ball eagle in your backyard? I got you beat, man. I spotted a peacock in what you could call my backyard.

Usually all you see in the backroads north of Palmdale are abandoned dogs or old furniture, wood piles, bags of trash or yard debris.

Sometimes you see sheetrock, old TV’s, mounds of yard dirt where somebody got a new lawn or got rid of the old lawn in favor of a sort of xeriscape plan.

Once in a while you see an old car by the side of the road. One time, I spotted a dude walking from the onion plant on K. It was a hot summer day and I knew he had 6 or 7 miles to go before he got to the edge of town. The guy said he was staying at his uncle’s mobile home park, he’d either just gotten divorced or just got out of prison, which is the same thing.

I slowed down a bit to look at the bird beside the road, it couldn’t a hawk. I’ve seen eagles too but this one had a distinctive shape and when I got close, the bird was deep in thought, he had a shiny deep blue neck and that spray of baby’s breath on his head. I called the animal control. I had no hopes of catching him although the sexy mulatta later assured me that peacocks don’t fly.

Untold
Untold
  EL Coyote
February 6, 2017 10:42 pm

Sexy mulattoes, eagles and peacocks. Patriots, falcons and sexy 1st Ladies. There’s a fable in there, somewhere, methinks.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Untold
February 6, 2017 11:40 pm

I don’t think mulatoes are sexy but to each his own.

We finally discouraged Maggie.
Remember when she wouldn’t miss an HF article for the world?

Mongoose Jack
Mongoose Jack
  Billah's wife
February 5, 2017 3:31 pm

Hehhehhehheh………Hehheh….BW……where have you been!!?? More than a few folks I’m sure noted the references to the big hands. I would bet a dollar to a dime that HSF meant no subliminal inference. Just telling a real and poignant story. But you….you possess the unique skills and stature around here to bring some hilarity. At this point HSF is probably rubbing his face cheeks with those enormous hands…..albeit briefly. He knew what he meant. BW….thank you….thank you….and don’t stay away so long!

Rob
Rob
February 5, 2017 9:26 am
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Rob
February 5, 2017 10:00 am

That was a great version of one of my favorite Jackson Browne songs. I always admired the fact that despite the sadness in most of his work there was always a silver lining underneath it, a glimmer of something beautiful in the sorrow that goes with life.

High praise, posting that video on this thread, many thanks.

norman franklin
norman franklin
  hardscrabble farmer
February 5, 2017 11:32 am

That was a great read, brought a tear to my eye. I miss the time I spent reading with and to my kids when they were young. That time spent was one of the best investments I ever made. francis marion is right you should make this into a hardback, I would buy a few for gifts and you could sell a ton of these around here at the farmers markets. Most people who show up at our markets would gladly fork over 25 bucks or more for a collection of hsf classics, just like in field of dreams. ‘for it is money they have, yet peace they lack.’

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
February 5, 2017 3:06 pm

HSF does it again. Good read.

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
February 5, 2017 9:10 pm

Ter be honest I been smoking so much meth ever time I try ter read this shit stream of depressing doom and gloom spurtin outer Admen’s anus I just start screamin and running around the trailer nude until Billy punches me out. Hey Hardscramble, I never got mah gawd dammed maple syrup and I mailed yer check and that shit cleared. Now I need uh refund er I’m reportin yer big gnarly handed ass.

Mongoose Jack
Mongoose Jack
  Billah's wife
February 6, 2017 5:56 am

BW, Oh my goodness, the imagery…..I can’t stop….the tears……oh….whew….a fresh hanky….ok, I’m composed now. Damn, that sounds like some rough treatment at home, but I do admire your resilience. Know whatcha mean about the conversation around here….it’s the times…and there’s a yuge need to commiserate so we keep coming back. Re the maple syrup: I’m sure there is just a glitch somewhere. After all this time reading HSF, I’m convinced the man is good as gold. You hang in there. Gotta go. Gonna go back and reread your last…..Hehhehheh…..two….heh…..posts…where’s the hanky….all the best. Cya.

Hollow man
Hollow man
February 5, 2017 9:35 pm

Please keep writing.

Konnie
Konnie
February 5, 2017 11:31 pm

My gosh, your writing is beautiful. I’m new here.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
February 5, 2017 11:32 pm

For what Hollow man, for a measly 39 comments? Folks would be more in tune if HF wrote about the Super Bowl.

However since it inspired the guys who are usually MIA – TPC, Rojam, Old Salt and norman to write, I’d say it’s worth it.

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
February 6, 2017 7:35 am

El Beaner, Hollow man was talkin ter me asshole. And yes, agreed, I don’t think there’s nothin we kin say ter git Hardscrambles comment count up. It’s like, all you kin really say is ‘wow, that’s nice and I’d be doing it too, cept my ass is stuck in a cubicle/manufacturing plant/non-farm due to needing to pay fer shit’. It just gits old.

Beaner, I been worried about yer ass. Aint you heard about yer fellow mongreloid horde being shipped back ter mexishithole?

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Billah's wife
February 6, 2017 8:55 am

BW,

Quality over quantity every time. Like I’ve said before, I’m grateful Admin posts my stuff on TBP, it’s an honor to be counted among the contributors here.

And I always send the syrup with and invoice. Payment due upon receipt.

If you sent me a check out of the blue I assume it’s a donation unless you specifically ask me to send you syrup, in which case I’d be more than happy to oblige. I’ve got an overdue shipment going out today so if you want to get in on it-

You know my email.

DRUD
DRUD
February 6, 2017 12:33 pm

Terrific writing once again. Good writing evokes powerful emotions and memories from banal vagaries, such as scars. Most of the time your stuff makes me think about my grandfather. I never knew him, but I’ve read his memoirs several times and I have such admiration and envy for the life he led.
He adventured all over the world, then build a dude ranch on the edge of the wilderness while raising a new family, with a depression on. Then worked a cattle ranch until he retired. A tough life lived by a tough man, and yet every single picture I see of him, I see a man of great joy.

Billah's wife
Billah's wife
February 6, 2017 4:42 pm

Well I’m licking orangutan anus here Hardscramble, yer called mah bluff. I didn’t send no check after all.

Carry on. I’m out.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Billah's wife
February 6, 2017 8:58 pm

That was a given. Bank of Appalachia closed your account long ago on account of your a no account. Let’s face it, how many meth heads are in good standing at the local bank branch inside the 7/11?

MuckAbout
MuckAbout
February 6, 2017 6:09 pm

Lovely HSF. I’ve tried to work without gloves, managed it sometimes and fail miserably others. I’ve more or less given up and when the work is hard, I pussy out and wear gloves.. (I also have three injured fingers on my right hand which does not make not wearing gloves a problem.).. Besides, my wife loves a massage now and again, sometimes with anti-inflamatory cream and rough callused hands do not make the experience enjoyable..

Still a great story – again.

TPC
TPC
  MuckAbout
February 6, 2017 10:11 pm

Found out that softly using my knuckles worked fairly well. Just advice for those leather-handed people out there.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
February 6, 2017 7:25 pm

HSF, nice read – but I missed out on last year’s syrup, and want some this year. Can you send the contact info again? Thanks! JtW