Grandpa’s Barn
My granddad’s barn as built on the order of so many other barns in
southwest Pennsylvania. It was built on a sloping hillside where one side of
the barn’s foundation was partly underground while the other was open to the
air. The side underground had a slightly graduated ramp that allowed access to
the second story barn floor.
The part of the barn not underground allowed doors to be built to give the
farm animals ingress to their stalls and mangers. The initial access was a
large area that ran the length of the barn. It gave the animals a shelter from
the cold and wet weather. They would wait there until the doors to their stalls
were opened.
The second floor consisted of a wide main floor that gave Grandpa a place
to store the tractor. On each side of the main floor, were areas almost as
large. These were areas where the hay was stored: loose tossed hay and later
when balers were available areas to stack the bales of hay. The hay storage had
the roof of the barn two stories overhead, while the central floor had a floor
above it for storage.
To one edge was a small square room for the keeping of corn and feed. It
was solidly built of wood and covered in a wire mesh to prevent rodents and
birds from gaining access to the grains that was feed for his animals. The
barn’s skeleton was made of huge beams fastened by wooden pegs in tennon and
socket joints.
Granddad always had two milk cows. He preferred Guernsey’s, saying that
their milk was richer and filled with cream. He raised a bull for butchering in
the fall, usually a short-horned Herford.
He had several pigs, raised for their meat.
At one time when I was small, he had two horses; one was a black
stallion, named Blackie (of course), that allowed no one near but my granddad
and one stupid kid. I was told I was that stupid kid. I toddled out of the
house and walked to where my granddad had the horse tied. I was standing under
its belly, trying to pet it. My mom and grandma went to get my granddad, they
were afraid I’d get trampled if they approached. My granddad rescued me. I was
young enough not to remember, only what my mom told me.
The other horse was an older female, and she was the work horse named
Pet. Granddad would sometimes hoist several kids onto her back and walk the
horse around to give us rides. Pet was gentle and would follow my granddad
around like a dog.
My uncle Charles and Dale decided to work on Charles’ car in the barn.
The beams made a great place to use pulleys and ropes to deal with the motor.
It was an older Buick; wide and heavy. Charles backed it inside. The main
section of the barn floor groaned under the weight. In one loud crash, the
floor collapsed, remaining intact and the Buick was partly in the bottom of the
barn. The back end was down and the front end was up. When the floor fell, it
made a ramp and they were able to pull the car out of the hole. Later they were
able to lift the barn floor back into place and secure it, stronger than
before.
The outside of the barn as long as I can remember was a weathered gray,
while the inside colors ranged from a honey color to a bleached bone hue. The
beauty of them was enhanced by rays of sunshine slipping through the spaces
between the boards of the barn’s siding.
Little can beat the smell of fresh mow hay stored in a barn. The smells
of the animals below and a sometimes sharp tang to the smells of the hay and
the feeds are almost perfume to a person who grows up on a farm or has worked
on a farm.
No comments:
Post a Comment