Monday, April 23, 2012

Stormed Out

My travel plans received a scramble this weekend. After weeks of drought a heavy storm rained from Sunday through to this afternoon. The boss begged me in Saturday to help get things situated for the weather-- so much for reunion getaways.  I slumped in and harrowed from dawn to dusk-- the amount of work I polished off was mind-numbing. Almost the entire 20 acres of the hilltop are churned under and ready to plant, including the span we rocked through last week. That day alone was a masterclass in tractor finesse-- unlike the smooth tomato/forest fields I worked over before, and despite the days of hauling-- enormous rocks still hid beneath the soil's surface. Managing the harrow depth was enough to give me a heart attack, I burned through two packs of cigarettes.

(Notes for me: I'm shifting a lot more smoothly these days, but gotta remember the engine can handle more stress than I'm willing to allow. The shaking/shuddering I noticed these past weeks was due to feather foot/throttle. Under 100,000rpm is too low, 100,000-150,000 is optimal driving (12-13 the sweet spot). During operation, with the PTO chugging and all, 150,000 is the lock in ( not much higher, definitely no lower). Gear ranges: B-2 is a nice fast clip for most work (spreading/fertilizing/dragging/ harrowing smooth fields), but when the going is rocky and the muscle needs to bear toss down to B-1. A is for overkill-- save this gear range for carving through mountains. Old remembrances: last year when hitching on the water pump (running the tractor stationary) 20-250,000rpms was pretty standard. All the irrigation arteries travel a long ways/ up some serious hills, so go high but try not to blow out the water system. No one needs that.)

My tractor paranoia served me well enough, but I still managed to shatter one of the 3ft disks on a troublesome stone shelf. The boss didn't seem to mind. Red-tailed hawks were out nesting, but the pleasure of the day was bittersweet. Empty farms breed a long dagger of lonesomeness. A place needs people: Newport, Bah, the Guatemalans and the summer kids can't come soon enough.

But the rains hit hard and weekends are a small sacrifice for a good season. The fields are looking beautifully, if we keep up the pace and stay atop the workload everything will be just fine.

It was dark this morning and the rain was still coming down, so the boss called us all to stay home. I filled the day with little errands, mostly trying to get my truck outfitted for the season ahead. With a fat fresh paycheck in the bank, I went on a spending spree: bought rubber mats for the truck's cab, air fresheners (for the cigarettes), a tarp ( to cover over the seats on the working-rain days), jumbo box of band-aids/polysporin, new boots/laces/leather sealant, a flashlight (for late nights at the greenhouse), picked up my new glasses (old man) and grabbed a new pocket knife (the old one's probably at the bottom of a field somewhere). After running out of excuses to spend money I was just left a bit aimless. A day off is the working man's enemy. Didn't know what to do with myself, but on the advice of a friend I started teaching myself Spanish.

I'm soaking up the vocabulary fast, but I have yet to touch the grammar bits. Tasks for another day.

Hasta Luego!


No comments:

Post a Comment