Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Our Childhood on the Ranch

Paul, Junelle and Jim at the Park Valley Cemetery about 1941


We grew up after the great depression of the 1930's and were children during the war years of the early 1940's, and the rationing of World War II.  It was normal everyday life for us and all our neighbors in the small country communities of Lynn and Park Valley.  As we have talked through the years, we have found that our family life experiences were much the same, which included baths in the tin wash tub, hair cuts with the hand clippers, back when school attire the boys was shirts and bib overalls and the girls wore dresses, pinafores and long socks.

Most of our food was basic, “made from scratch”, meaning that if we made a cake, we used flour, eggs, shortening, sugar etc.  There were no cake mixes back then.  We grew large vegetable gardens and had orchards of fruit trees.  We had lots of greens and vegetables. We grew our own chickens, pigs and beef cattle for meat and the small herd of dairy cows we milked morning and night.  The milk was poured into a separator, we cranked the handle by hand and the skim milk came out one spout and the cream from another.  The pigs were fed the skim milk and we made butter from the cream in the old churn, turning it by hand, which also provided the buttermilk for Mom’s special ginger crumb cake.  We also sold whole milk and cream, giving us checks for cash.  We had laying hens and it was our job to feed the chickens and gather the eggs every day.  Some eggs were also sold.  In the spring the folks would order baby chickens through a mail order and raise them in the little brooder house until they were big enough to let out in the chicken run.  We really enjoyed Mom’s fried chicken with mashed potatoes and gravy, or potato salad and deviled eggs.  Homemade ice cream and cinnamon rolls were also a very special treat. Those country women were really good cooks! 

Only a few essential items were purchased at the grocery store.  The fruits and vegetables were “bottled” all summer long, also jams and jellies, corn and beans and various kinds of pickles, were all organized down stairs in the fruit cellar.  There was also a root cellar, near the brick house, for storing potatoes, carrots, squash, onions, apples, at harvest time.  We were pretty much self sustaining.

In the summer we helped in the gardens, watering and weeding, and in the fields of hay and grain, where we used teams of horses.  We rode the derrick horse and liked to ride on the top of the wagon loads of loose hay headed to the stack yards by the house.  We set the nets for the meadow hay, used a hay loader, a buck rake, a dump rake and a Jackson fork to ‘put up’ the stacks of loose alfalfa and meadow hay.  We had a binder to cut and tie the grain into bundles which we stood in shocks, ready for the thrasher crew. There were no tractors or bailers back then. 

We had daily chores, like filling the wood box, feeding the animals, gather the eggs or watering the horses, but a lot of the work was fun for us kids, and adventurous too.  There was time to pick wild flowers, catch bull frogs, watch the clouds roll by, run trap lines, ride horses, check out nests for bird eggs or make mud pies.  We liked to go with Dad to the meadows to change the water, and to the canyon to fish or fix fences.  We enjoyed  feeding the cattle in winter, going to the mountains for the Christmas tree or branding calves in spring. We didn’t have electricity back then.  (We were almost teenagers when electrical power lines were built into the small rural communities in western Box Elder County where we grew up and it CHANGED OUR WORLD!)

In those early years, for heat and cooking we had a wood burning kitchen range with a baking oven and small warming ovens on top, and warmed water in the  reservoir on the opposite end from the cook top. We also had a fireplace and a coal stove for heat.  Our lights were small gas or coal oil lamps that hung from a hook in the kitchen ceiling or sat on the table.  Our bedrooms were cold and frigid in winter.

Back then, in the rural communities and on the ranches, breakfast was a large meal and was meant to get the day started right.  It would include cooked cereal, bacon, sausage or sliced fried ham, eggs, baking power biscuits, or fried potatoes, hash, or pancakes.  Several if not all of these, especially when we had company.  Dinner was the noon meal, usually a large full meal, would include meat, potatoes and gravy, with vegetables and salad, followed by dessert.  Supper was in the evening and was the smaller meal of the day.  Sunday dinner was often a pot roast of venison or beef with vegetables, put in the oven of the kitchen range and left to cook while we were at church.  Homemade rolls, pies, cakes, cinnamon rolls or cookies were a part of most meals.  Ice cream was homemade with our own milk, eggs, lots of cream, vanilla and sugar, then churned by hand with ice from the ice shed or from the mountain.  We learned that using snow in the freezer took a lot longer to freeze.

In the early years, our water came from a well in the front yard that had a hand pump that stood on the top of the well.  We just pumped the handle and into the bucket hanging on the spout of the pump, came fresh cold water.  Our friends, the Al James family in Muddy, had a large, long rope on a reelthat hung from the well cover with a bucket tied to the end that they would let down into the open well to fill with water.  Our bathroom facilities were hand soap and a little water basin in the kitchen and a path to the outhouse.

On wash day, we would fill two large boiler pans with water from the well and heat them on the kitchen range, then pour them into the gas-powered Maytag washer, and add some of Mom’s homemade laundry soap.  The rinse water was a tub of cold water from the well with a little “blueing” added to whiten the whites and sheets.  It took all day to do all the batches of clothes and get them hung on the clothes lines to dry.  Washday was Monday and ironing day was on Tuesday, using the flat irons heated on the top of the kitchen range.  Cleaning day was usually on Saturday.  Bread baking took place a couple of times a week, four to six loaves at a time, made by hand.

We often had company drop in and they were always invited to stay to eat.  Those country cooks could really stretch a meal.  We went to visit often with family and friends and they came to our house.  It was a slower pace of life back then.  There was no TV, but we did have a battery powered radio that Dad would turn on in the evening to hear the news.  We played games and did a lot of reading and puzzles on the long winter nights and we also had a piano. 

We had a very close bond with family members and neighbors.  We depended on each other.  We spent a lot of time together, enjoyed church socials, dances and school activities.  It was a bonding experience and a diversion from everyday life.  It was simpler way of life and what great memories we each have from those days of our childhood on the ranch.

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