Scott, Kelsey, Luke, and Kerry grudgingly made their
way through the corn stubble in the field east of their grandpa’s peach trees.
They were fanned out behind Richard and were watching the ground as they
walked. Each person carried a bucket containing varying amounts of corn. Scott
stopped and bent down to pick up an ear. He pulled the husk from the ear before
dropping it into his bucket.
“What is it that we’re doing again?” Kelsey inquired
from Scott’s left.
“Gleaning,” Scott replied with a sigh.
“Why?” Kelsey inquired further. “It’s not like Dad
can’t give him some corn if that’s what he wants.”
“Well who would use the corn that’s left in the field
then?” Richard interjected with a smile.
The kids didn’t answer. Richard, having lived through
The Great Depression, had a different perspective on life than the children.
His coveralls were decorated with patches, he wore socks that he had purchased
over twenty years earlier, he spooned dressing off his grandchildren’s salads
when they over applied, and he gleaned the fields for corn. That’s just the way
things were. He never wasted anything and he never let anything go to waste. (I
realize that the last sentence seems repetitive but wasting implies active waste while
letting something go to waste is more passive. Wasting is throwing away a pair of coveralls instead of patching a
hole. Letting something go to waste is
not gleaning corn in an already harvested field. Also, gleaning is the act of collecting the grain that was left behind by
the people who harvested the field. See Ruth chapter two for another example of
this practice.)
“Why do you need this corn anyways, Grandpa?” Luke
asked.
“Well, I’m going to feed it to the pigs,” Richard
replied with a shrug.
Every autumn, Richard went to the livestock auction in
search of pigs. He always bid on the runts because they were the cheapest pigs
available. He’s buy three or four of them, sometimes more and raise them
through the winter until President’s Day. At that point, the pigs would be
butchered to feed the Henning family. Richard would feed the pigs apples from
his orchard, corn acquired through gleaning, table scraps, and milk from the
farm that was not suitable for human consumption. Needless to say, by the time
President’s Day rolled around, none of the pigs looked like runts.
All this meant that the Henning kids were pressed into
service from time to time to contribute to the process. They didn’t relish the
idea of participating in such a capacity but they accepted that this sort of
thing was just par for the course. They enjoyed a lot of activities with their
grandfather who was particularly accommodating to their wants and desires
(within bounds of reason) so they felt inclined to accommodate him from time to
time. (It’s not as if they really had a choice. They were at their grandpa’s
house so they did what their grandpa asked of them.)
The children converged for a break around Richard who passed
around a plastic mug full of water. Once the children enjoyed a drink, they
emptied their buckets into a burlap sack. Scott sat on a bucket and
absentmindedly flicked kernels off and ear of corn and into his bucket.
He looked around at the field in which they worked. It
was uncharacteristically flat for the family farm. The Henning farm was
primarily nestled in the valley of two large hills. Richard and Mary lived on
top of the eastern hill where there were a couple of flatter fields that
bordered the houses on Baird Road. Scott glanced longingly at the peach trees
to his right. Peach season was over so Scott’s days of grabbing a peach or
three off the tree for his own enjoyment were over until the next year. No more
peaches to eat, just corn to glean. He looked behind him at the woods towards
the back of the family property. The trees were ablaze with color. Red, orange,
and yellow had pushed the green from the trees over the last few weeks creating
the color pallet of fall. The tan fields of yet-to-be-harvested corn looked
bland against the colorful backdrop. The seasons were changing. Every day,
night crept over the farm just a little earlier and morning came just a little
later. The warmth of the summer faded into the coolness of autumn. Hoodies and
jackets came out of storage and hayrides and bonfires became the activities of
choice. The orange pumpkins in Richards garden became more prominent as their
vines withered and died. It was hard to imagine that summer was in full swing a
few short weeks ago and winter was just around the corner. It was hard for the
children to let go of summer, but the season change offered its own special
brand of exhilaration. With the passing of each season came the dawn of the next.
It was amazing to see the seasonal transitions display the glory of God.
Fall
is a good thing, Scott nodded to himself. Even if it means that we have to glean corn.