Village Squire, 1979-08, Page 42P.S.
When lazy summer
days were guilt free
Someone, somewhere should be printing
picket signs. Someone should be planning
demonstration strategy. Someone should
be planning how to organize kids to
protest.
Here we are in the year of the child and
adults are busy trying to get changes in the
law that will deprive children of one of their
greatest rights: the right (or rite) of
summer vacations.
Oh I know it makes sense, this plan
people are promoting to close the schools
down during the cold, stormy winter and
shorten the summer vacation. I know it
should conserve energy. I know it would be
safer by keeping school buses filled with
children off the icy roads on days when it's
storming so hard you can't see your hand
in front of your face. And yes I know that
times have changed; that the long summer
vacation was designed back in the days
when the majority of people lived on farms
and the children were needed to work to
get the crops in and off. The long vacation
was not just a matter of convenience then
but of necessity. If the school didn't have a
two-month break in summer there
wouldn't have been any children in the
classroom anyway. Many a father wasn't
too struck on education at the best of times.
Yes I know there's a lot of common sense
to the proposal, sense from an adult's point
of view at any rate. But has anybody asked
the kids?
Memories of what summer holidays used
to be like came back a little the other day
when I sneaked a few minutes one noon
hour to lie on a lawn chair out on the side
lawn. Just lying there, face up to the warm
sunshine, feeling that warm feeling of
contentment and lassitude creep through
my body with the heat of the sun the
thoughts of those long ago summers came
flooding back. Those days before we
became old enough to be plagued with
guilt feelings of work that should be done
or summer jobs we should have because
those things were expected of us were the
most pleasant memories of my childhood,
and I suspect of the childhood of others.
People talk of the creativity of childhood
and I think it was never more alive than in
those early summers when my best friend,
my kid brother and I, roamed our two
farms looking for real and imaginary
adventures. It was a time when children
didn't have so many ready-made entertain-
ments and there were even fewer on our
farms as parents struggled to keep heads
above financial waters as the economics of
hard times on the farm pushed them
downward. We didn't notice though. There
40 Village Squire, August 1979
were so many delights waiting in every
corner of the hundreds of acres we roamed
freely.
Those were the dying days of the old
method of putting hay in the barn "loose"
before the baler took over. It was an
adventure to watch the hay mount on the
wagon as it was pulled from the hayloader
and packed down. It was a marvel to watch
the giant hay fork driven into the
wagonload, the horses or tractor pull the
rope and the load rise magically up from
the wagon up, up to the ceiling and scurry
across the wooden or metal track at the top
of the barn to the mow where with a tug of
the trip rope. Sometimes we kids would be
enlisted to help pack down the hay and
we'd tramp around the mow until our legs
ached. But when the men finished in the
mow our fun had just begun. The high
beams of the barn made perfect climbing
places, the tow rope of the hay fork made a
perfect swing and the loose hay in the
mow made a perfect, sweet smelling and
soft landing place. We would play like
Tarzan for hours on end. I remember
visiting city cousins. weary from hours of
swinging in the hay mow bemoaning to
parents that they didn't have anything like
this in the city.
Then there was the creek at the back of
our neighbour's farm for fishing and
swimming and exploring adventures as
lively as any Livingstone had in the Congo.
We roamed the woods discovering
imagined Indian burial grounds and
looking for arrow heads we never found.
We hunted bears and wolves and deer with
stick guns.
We played more formal games too,
though equally informally. A newly -cut
hayfield became a baseball field until the
second cut clover grew too tall. A bat, a
ball and a few friends from down the
"line" and we had a great time. A
closely -cropped cow pasture became a golf
course with the use of curved wooden
branches and tree roots for clubs and
plenty of hazards of a kind they never face
at the Canadian Open.
We had some derelict cars in the orchard
that provided hundreds of hours of
entertainment. We invented machinery of
all kinds and built things that never worked
the way we hoped. We played at being
everything from farmers like our parents to
airplane pilots to Indian hunters to soldiers
fighting Hitler.
And the nice thing was it was completely
guiltless. When we got older such
moments of escape were always accompan-
ied but pangs of conscience because there
was always something "useful" we could
be doing with those minutes or hours.
Those days of being free to do nothing but
dream in the summer sun are gone.
Should we really take those pleasures
away from today's kids?
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