Grandpa’s Bull
The
afternoon peace was shattered. The car swung into the driveway like it was
coming off the main straight at Bathurst. There was a cheeky toot-toot from the
horn. The back doors flew open and my grandchildren came out at a gallop. Six
year old Sally was in the lead, legs almost a blur in her haste. ‘Grandpa,
Grandpa!’ Her high-pitched voice penetrated the air like a siren and made my
ears ring. Not far behind was little Micky. Two years old and feet not yet
fully coordinated. He was not helped by the latest fashion in long shorts,
elastic waist up under his armpits and legs that terminated just above his
ankles. I really love to see them. They’ll be gone in two days, Aaah! The
involuntary sigh escaped.
They hit me like rugby tacklers,
grabbing me around the legs. I stooped to give them a hug. ‘Come on kids, put
grandpa down and get your things from the car!’ My daughter put her arms around
me and gave me a peck on the cheek. ‘It’s lovely to see you again, dad and
great to get out of the city for a while.’ Son-in-law John reached the step,
dropped one suitcase and stuck his hand out. ‘G’day old fella. How’re you
going?’ I shook his hand and we all went inside to the kitchen where Allison
was up to her elbows preparing a gourmet dinner. ‘Mum, you shouldn’t be doing
this. We could have picked up a takeaway on the way in!’
John stood back a little
self-consciously. ‘Want a beer mate?’ His face lit up as I took two from the
fridge and passed one to him. We moved to the lounge and left the women to sort
out the food and the kids. ‘Good trip?’ I asked as we settled down into facing
armchairs. ‘It was the usual for a long weekend. The traffic was heavy coming
out of the city, but it got better when we got into the country!’ I switched on
the television to get the late afternoon news. There were shots of all the arterial
roads out of the city, with the vehicles almost at a stand-still. I’m really
glad we live in the country.
Dinner was the usual circus. Some got
eaten, some got left – but nobody starved. ‘Okay kids, it’s time for bed! Karen
tried to round up Sally and Micky. Sally was kneeling on a chair at the table. ‘No.
No. It’s story time.’ Micky’s echo came from under the table. ‘Storly time!’
Sally took control. ‘Grandpa you tell us a story!’ That little echo came again.
‘Glanpa storly.’
‘Okay, let me tell you about when Ma and
I came to Australia.’ ‘Yeah, grandpa, yeah!’ ‘Sit down quietly and we can
start.’
‘A long time ago…’ ‘How long ago?’
‘Many years ago in 1968. We were the last of the ten pound poms.’
‘What’s a ten pound pom?’ ‘Shush Sally, listen to grandpa!’
‘When we arrived in Australia, we bought
an old utility truck and went out to work on a farm about fifteen miles out
from here. I was the new chum. It was a totally different world to me. I was so
green, I didn’t know wheat from corn, but I learned fast. We were put up in one
of the labourer’s houses on the farm. Ma was going through, checking the
bedrooms when I heard the loudest scream she’d ever made. I rushed into the
room expecting to see her covered in blood, or at least being attacked by
something bigger than her. I found her with her back against a wall, pointing
at the open wardrobe door. Inside was the biggest spider I’d ever seen. I went
to the kitchen and picked up the insect spray. I gave it to Ma and she didn’t
just spray it, she drowned that poor old spider.
Because I had been an engineer in the
old dart, I was put to work servicing the farm machinery. Tractors, ploughs,
scarifiers, harvesters and then around all the bores, pulling up the pumps and
fitting new seals and washers. Ma worked around the house, looking after the
two kids – your mum and your uncle. We got there in the December and the
temperature was up around the 95 degrees farenheit mark. We had just come from
less than 40 degrees in the south of England, so it was almost unbearable for
us. The only cooking appliance in the house was a solid fuel stove. It also
heated the water, so it was lit most of the time. We did a lot of living
outside on the veranda, under the shade of an old pepper tree.
We were out there one day when Ma saw
one of the cats stalking something across the back yard. She moved in for a
closer look and saw that it was a brown snake about four feet long. She was
just like a cartoon character. She jumped in the air as she turned and her legs
were running before she hit the ground. The snake continued its leisurely way
to the wood pile. Ma never went to get wood from that day on. I had to carry
the wood for the day up to the house before I went off to work.
When the rain came, all work stopped. As
soon as the soil would support the tractor, the work started. This was another
new experience for me, driving the Comfort King tractor, towing a 36 tine
scarifier. Ricky the young permanent farmhand and I shared the driving. Twelve
hour shifts. Ricky liked to go into town in the evenings, so he took the day
shift, eight in the morning to eight at night. I did the night shift, eight at
night to eight in the morning. Ma would bring out my supper at about eleven and
breakfast at six and I’d stop for a few minutes break.
They didn’t have air conditioned tractor
cabs in those days. You sweated in the evening and then froze at night. In the
morning you got down from the tractor, covered in layers of dust, looking like
the bunyip that they told us lived under the bridge across the creek.
It got really boring in the middle of
the night going round and round the huge paddocks. I would sing songs to myself
and there are limitations to I Spy in the dark! Sometimes I could see the
lights of a neighbour ploughing five miles away, but most of the time it was
just me and the tractor and the scarifier. Every so often I had to stop, lift
the tines and clear the weeds that had accumulated. Then it was back on the
tractor, lower the tines and keep going. On one occasion, I forgot to lower the
tines and they just scratched the surface until I realised what I had done. I
immediately lowered them back to cutting depth and kept going. I could see the
scratch marks in the rear working light, no one would know!
I was soon to learn another lesson. Farmer
Dave put a mob of sheep into the freshly worked paddock. The next afternoon, I
got up to see the sheep huddled together on the firm ground that I had missed
last night. I got a cynical look and asked how long I had been asleep on the
job.
Ma learnt to drive out there on the
farm. We had a second hand Holden FB ute. It had a manual gear box, with the shift
up on the steering column and a dip switch for the headlights down on the floor
beside the clutch pedal. The gear box took a bit of a hammering as she ground
up and down the farm tracks, but she gradually improved.
She had a few interesting experiences.
One morning my breakfast was half an hour late because she got bailed up by a
big goanna in the middle of the track. It just stood there staring at her. There were trees on either side so she couldn’t
drive around it and she would have needed four wheel drive to go over it. She
stopped well back from it and tried using the horn to frighten it into
shifting. It just stood there staring at her. Then she bravely got out of the
ute, picked up a big stick and beat the ground. It just stood there staring at
her. In disgust and frustration, she threw the stick at it and got back into
the ute. After many more minutes, it haughtily lifted its head and slowly
ambled towards the trees at the side of the track.
Another time she was driving on the farm
with the two kids when a huge huntsman spider came out from under the dash
board. Little Karen screamed and climbed up onto Ma and hung around her neck,
effectively preventing her from driving. Kevin jumped onto the back of the
seat, pressing himself against the rear window. Ma stalled the ute, opened the
door and bailed out with Karen still attached to her neck. She doesn’t know
how, but when she turned around, Kevin was already outside standing behind her.
That day, she abandoned the ute and walked back to the house. I had to go and
pick it up later.
My farm transport was a Ferguson 35
tractor. It was very basic with a small rack on the back that could be raised
and lowered with hydraulics. This was normally in the raised position when
travelling. This is very important because one day, it saved me from certain
injury.
We got our job list from Dave each
morning and this day, among the tasks was moving the bull from the home paddock
to a stubble patch on the other side of the farm. Ricky had been on the town
the night before, so he took one of the jobs in the shed out of the sun. He
told me that moving the bull was easy. Open the gate, get on the tractor,
follow the bull through the gate and shut it after he had gone through. Get
ahead of the bull to the next gate and open it. Follow this procedure across
the farm to the final paddock and shut the gate behind the bull. That sounded
really simple.
I didn’t know anything about bulls,
except that this one appeared to hate me! Every time that I got close to him,
always with a fence between us, he gave me a malevolent stare, tossed his head
and snorted loudly. Well, I thought the look was malevolent. In my naïvety; he
may have been trying to make friends.
The first gate was easy. The bull was at
the other end of the paddock; I opened the gate, got on the tractor and moved
around the fence line to take up position behind the animal. He gave me that
well known look over his shoulder and shambled off towards the open gate. Once
through, I let him get well ahead before I dismounted and shut the gate. I then
had to drive quite quickly (for a Fergy) to get to the next gate before he did.
I made it with a few seconds to spare. I opened the gate, got back on the tractor
and drove away from the gate to allow him to go through.
He kept moving lethargically while I
circled around and shut the gate behind him. When I tried to get to the next
gate, it was obvious that the bull had worked out the routine. I increased
speed to go around him but he worked up to a trot and then broke into a canter,
keeping one red-rimmed eye on me, as he stayed parallel to the tractor. I
slowed the tractor, hoping to change the pattern, but the bull only slowed to a
jog. He reached the gate first and turned, just like a beast at bay. He lowered
his head and made a menacing move towards me, pawing the ground threateningly.
I stopped the tractor. What am I going
to do? I could drive along the fence line, jump off the tractor, over the fence
and open the gate from the other side, but then, when the bull went through, we
would both be on the same side of the fence and me with no tractor! Before I
could decide, the bull charged. He rammed the hard part of his head, between
his horns, into the front of the Fergy. The little tractor was pushed back
several feet. I saw the bull lining up for a second run. I threw the lever into
reverse and accelerated backwards. Due to the movement, the second charge had a
lighter impact. I felt like one of those cowardly warriors who were reputed to
have tanks with one forward and six reverse gears.
I came to a stop half way back towards
the gate that we had come through. The bull circled around as if lining up for
a charge at the side of the tractor. He had my measure; I could not reach
either gate. There was a solitary tree in the centre of the paddock. The lower
foliage had been stripped by generations of cattle grazing here. I slammed the
tractor into gear and headed for the tree. The bull charged in from the side. I
reached the tree, jumped off the seat onto the raised platform behind me and
leaped for the lowest branch. I got my right arm over it as the bull hit the
side of the tractor and pushed it into the trunk of the tree. The whole thing
shook and I almost lost my grip.
Scrabbling with my feet on the trunk, I
hauled myself up onto the branch and sat there quivering as the bull paraded
below me, tossing his head and kicking up dust with his front hooves.
So that’s how grandpa got treed by a
bull!
I sat there for over an hour before Dave
and Ricky came to rescue me. I thought that I would be roasted by Dave, but it
was Ricky who got told off.’
“You know he’s greener than a
well-watered Lucerne patch. Why did you let him do it? You know better. Get a
couple of cows and the bull will walk along quietly with them. You could have
got him killed – or more importantly, the bull could have been injured!”
Little Micky was sound asleep in his
dad’s arms and Sally was fighting to keep her eyes open.
Karen looked across at me. ‘I’ve never
heard you tell that one before, dad!’
‘No luv, I keep the best ones for
special occasions. Want a beer John?’
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