I have a job! Many jobs, actually, most of which include
driving green tractors—oh yes, John Deere gets a nod from Australia—and
struggling with irrigation and its ups, downs, flows, and stops. The Watsons
hired me while I was still in Montana, kind of a wing and a prayer I suppose,
thanks mainly to Laura Boyce. I can’t thank her enough. I am now living in one
of their cottages and enjoying their kindness and hospitality and surplus of
farm work, some familiar, some entirely new to me. Along with lateral
irrigation, the Watson farm uses mostly siphon irrigation, which falls into the
category of work that is unfamiliar to me. Well, it’s at least marginally
familiar now, but I did struggle and elicit quite a lot of laughter from my
trainer, Cliff, in the early period of my irrigation expertise.
I now can start many siphons in a much shorter time period.
The basic formula is water in an irrigation ditch, a black plastic tube about 6
feet long, and an arching motion that includes creating suction with one hand
and plunging the tube into the ditch and back out with the other hand until it
is full and ready to be thrown down. The full pipe is thrown into a rotor buck,
an earthen, wide ditch that is dug by an implement on the back of a (green)
tractor, on the other side of the irrigation ditch. So the pipe is draped
across the field side of the irrigation ditch and siphons water until it is
lifted, kicked, flipped into inertia. It’s definitely an acquired kind of
enjoyment.
The idea is to direct the water between two cotton rows; the
water runs down every other ditch between the cotton rows and is “subbed up” in
the remaining rows from exposure to water for 12 to however-many hours it needs
to run through the rows. Cotton came up first on the field I irrigated with
much assistance from Cliff and my boss, Andrew Watson. Here’s photographic
evidence for your records!
Other than actual irrigation, I’ve spent hours with Wayne,
another of my coworkers, throwing siphons into the ditches, aiming for the
rotor bucks on the other side of the irrigation ditch. Roads skirt every field,
every irrigation ditch, and we drive along them pulling the pipe trailer,
throwing siphons from the back. The result: I have the shoulders of a football
player.
Every morning and evening that I went to my field, W9, I was
berated by cockatoos and galahs. If ever I’ve been happy with a thorough
butt-chewing, this is the time. To think that I can wake up in the morning, say
hello to the inevitable yard kangaroos that hop away with a reproachful wave of
their tails, listen to the countless songs, chirpings, and crowings of the
hordes and hordes of birds, and weave my way through stands of gum and
eucalyptus trees, leaves me with a pleasant feeling and a solid justification
for my choice of country to live in for a year.
I'm sorry there are no pictures. The internet is deplorable, and it takes over an hour to upload two or three pictures. When I find better internet, I'll add pictures; I promise!
Sounds like you are truly enjoying yourself. Good Post
ReplyDeleteoops.... I think I wrote under Seth's account. Same message from me.... :)
ReplyDeleteEnjoy every moment... life is too precious!
ReplyDelete...and when you're older, the memories are sweeter!
Delete