Friday, 15 March 2013
No 231 THE TATTIE PIT.
No 231. The Tattie
Pit.
Most
crofters and many farmers stored their tatties outdoors in tattie pits. Shed
space in many steadings was often scarce and farms, big or small, often stored
their tatties in a clamp, changing site every year. Farm workers would have no
shed space at all so clamping their tatties was the norm. Many preferred to
have a clamp anyway as it kept the tatties better than shed storage.
A bit of
ground was selected, usually on a slight rise or slope and therefore dry. In
late autumn, 22nd
October 1896, the day after
lifting his tatties, Tom Delday, a Deerness man then working for my grandfather
at the Bu of Rousam in Stronsay, went to the hill for turf to cover his
tatty pit. That turf would be old and tough, easily flayed off the hill. It might have been the turf flayed off the
peat bank earlier in the year and set aside for later collection, though not
all such turrings were suitable for the tattie clamp. There was a special
turring breast spade that allowed a man to skim off a thin layer of turf,
different from the turrings of a peat bank which were normally very much
thicker.
Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster,
about 1810, took skilled men from Westmorland in England to Thurso East to skim
the turf off new land for taking into cultivation on the eventual farm thereof.
That turf was but a few inches thick, fibrous grass and roots and maybe some
heather. It was wind and sun dried, gathered into heaps, set on fire and the
ashes spead as fertiliser on the new
ground.
In places
it was a bad practice as it denuded some land to improve bits elsewhere.
It was done
about 1860 on my first farm of Lower Dounreay, under William Reid Tait, then
factor for the Murkle Estate owned by Admiral
Sir John Gordon Sinclair, Bart, (who died in 1863)
The old leases expired in
1859 and the whole Estate was remodelled, new farms laid out, crofters and
cottars cleared .
The
Rousam peat hill produced a great
variety of differing turfs, some heather covered, some tough old grass, and
Delday would know full well what was best suited to cover his tatty clamp or
pit.
Such turf
would have been great insulation for the winter, placed on top of the pit after
the tatties were heaped in a conical row.
Straw was placed over the tatties in a fairly thick layer, then the
earth and turf which had been cleared to make the base of the pit was laid
carefully on top, keeping the straw from blowing away overnight. A layer of turf ASAP to finish it all. A
small thick vent of upright straw was often set into the top of the clamp,
allowing the tatties to breath surplus moisture into the outer air.
Such clamps
were remarkably frost free, even in a bad winter, the insulation as good as it
gets. Shed stored tatties could get frosted if care was not taken in covering
with straw and any old sacks past their prime, or re-covering when the heap was
opened to take some tatties out for the kitchen.
Care was
taken to see that the surface run of the heather or grass was slanted downwards
to run off as much rain as possible. The same turf was used by many a crofter
to roof his cottage. Culloden Battlefield has an old house roofed in the same
manner, and we can still find a house or a building so roofed, a relic and
reminder of the past but often still functional.
A quck run
through William Tait’s Diaries gave a resume of tattie lifting.
October 17th,
1907, lifting potatoes a.m. .
Champions, a variety much grown, went into two pits, five barrels in each. Fine day, no drout, a good day for
tattie lifting. Next day putting earth on tattie pits.
Following Spring on 3rd April, a Saturday,
they took in a pit of tatties a.m. Over the years it seems late March early
April was a fairly usual time for taking in a pit of tatties.
Then to
sorting them. One good reason for the
time was to get the smaller seed tatties sorted as well as the bigger eating
ones.
I came
across a crofter doing just that recently and took a few photos, with his
permission of course. !!! Two round
hand-held riddles, a helper to fill them, a sunny day to enjoy. First the small
riddle which let earth and small bits fall through. Then tip that riddle into
the larger one to keep the big tatties within it and let the smaller seed
tatties fall through into some recepticle. Backbreaking and tedious work on a
long day, but it got the job done!!
Monday, 4 March 2013
No 230 Sowingt neeps.
No 230 Sowing neeps
Neep sowing, a time of looking to the sky and wondering
what the day would bring. Dry weather in May and early June was desirable, nay,
essential!! The land was worked to desperation, harrowed, rolled, grubbed, then
all over again, sometimes re-ploughed, on occasion even crossways. The work was
endless to get the desired tilth.
On larger farms it was an all hands task. Weeds were
cleared where time allowed, chain harrows crossing and re-crossing again and
again at right angles to the last run to gather heaps of knot grass or couch
which was then loaded onto carts and dumped in some suitable out of the way
spot.
Another method was
to heap them up with graips - garden
forks to the city man - and apply a match on a dry and windy day. A good breeze
would greatly help to fan the fire which could smoulder on for days in calm
weather. Weeds of course were universal, and a letter from Stronsay emigrant
Oliver Drever, written from Brandon, Canada, in 1909, says:- .
“ In the first place the land is poorly
ploughed in a great many cases. On this farm the land is in a measure lost for
want of being properly ploughed & I saw this Spring any man that took time
to harrow properly you could see it in the crop going by on the road. Another
thing the land here is getting entirely overrun with weeds & wild oats is
the worst. They are just like Murtle oats at
home but have a very thick shell (skin or husk). They grow so fast &
as soon as they are shot off ( come into ear and ripen) they fall off &
seed the ground worse nor ever. The only way to make anything of them is in the
summer fallow get them to grow & then plough them down. We ploughed some
here three times this year It's worse nor Sinnie Grass a lot for it chockes
everything else”.
( Sinnie grass,
an Orkney word for couch grass.- Sinny
is Old Norse for rush plant ).
Then the field, worried to death and smooth as only a
fussy farmer could get it, or worse still his even more fussy grieve, was
drilled and sown. Neighbours looked critically to judge the straighness of the
ridges. Really quite beautiful when done to perfection, corrugating the
countryside.
The old horse drawn two-row neep sower was got out of the
shed and brushed down. Musty and mouldy seeds were emptied out of the
canisters. After sowing any spare seed was usually stored above the mantleplace
to keep dry to next year. Seeds from William Shearer in Kirkwall, established
1857, were selected, quantities carefully worked out to the nearest half pound.
Varieties were carefully chosen. What was it again that your neighbour had last
year that were so good, winning the Seed and Root Show hands down at Canisbay,
or where-ever?
What of the crofter without all the horses and men of the
large farms. On Mary-Ann Calder’s 11 acre croft in Dunnet they had 1 ¾ acres of
neeps with ¼ acre of tatties. At Isauld we used to ridge and sow ten acres a
day when the going was good, tractor power rather than horses and long 25 chain
fields. Before the tractor with two pairs of horses we would ridge about two
acres a day. Sowing had to be done before coming home up to the last drill and
never left overnight, even if the man worked late on into the evening. Drilling
usually stopped early enough to allow the sower to catch up.The ridges were
never allowed to lie overnight and dry out, soil moisture was at a premium.
From Canisbay I got a surprise when Jimmy Bremner produced
at lunch time last Friday from the boot of his car outside Ebenezers at
Mackay’s Hotel in Wick a relic of the past, a crofters one row neep sower, or
the canister and gear sprocket wheel anyway. The photo is self explanatory.
Back home I looked up my George Murray of Banff Catalogue,
1878, and found his contribution to neep sowing, crofter style!! Small scale
was an understatement. Murray had a “New Self Acting Hand Seed Drill”, the very
ultimate as far as I was concerned.
His caption reads:-
“This celebrated little Machine is very useful for
sowing all sorts of Garden Seeds.But more especially is it useful for mending
blanks or patches among Turnips.When the Farmer is passing through the fields
he can carry this little Machine along with him as it is not much heavier than
a walking stick , and run in a blank whenever he comes upon it. The Rim of the
travelling wheel is made conical (ensuing
steady travelling, so necessaary in it’s use. ) and presses the soil ready for
the Coulter. a result not to be obtained bywheels with flat or round rims,
which must of necessity jolt up and down
in passing over lumps, thereby wasting half the seed. Price 10s 6d “
So the crofter had available a small neep sower that
needed neither horse nor cow nor wife to drag it along the furrows!!! .
No 229 THE REVERSIBLE PLOW
No 229 THE REVERSIBLE
PLOUGH.
So you thought we were making progress, did you? Reversible ploughs, so much a part of our
ploughing matches today with classes for reversibles of all kinds, as well as
demonstrators showing just why we should buy their latest multi-furrow
creations. There is very little ploughing being done now on any farm other than
with reversibles. There is also an old saying “There is nothing new under the
sun.” So a look back not just to our crofters
but to blacksmithjs and foundry men of long ago might be interesting.
The series of THE CROFTER’S BARN has brought me many
photographs of some ancient farming appliance with sometimes a request as to
what it is and sometimes a challenge to identify it as well. One was a
photograph of a garden ornament which the owner-gardener did not know what it
was. He lives near Leeds in Yorkshire. Took some time amd some help before we
indentified it as a reversible plough. Not too ancient and not too far back, but I had not seen one
like it. Turned out to be a semi-mounted reversible plough possibly for a
Ferguson tractor, or a tractor of that size and time.
Looked at it by
turning the photograph 90 degrees and there it was. Cleaned up and painted with
black enamel paint, it looked good in that garden anyway. The owner had seen it
on eBAY, liked it and bought it. He knows now, but intends to leave his lawn
unploughed!!. It tripped or turned over each way with a pull lever reached from
the tractor seat.
When I re-printed
the 1878 Catalogue of G.W.Murray of Banff there was on page 8 a PATENT ONE-WAY
PLOUGH for horses. Not his invention as
there had been one way ploughs used earlier by the Duke of Sutherland to break
in virgin land around Lairg and Dalchork, and ultimately used by the Earl of
Caithness to break in Phillips Mains in Mey. These massive multi-furrow
reversible ploughs worked with two steam engines each moving along and across
either end of the field, each with a winch and a continuous steel rope pulling
the plough backwards and forwards over the land. The work at Phillips Mains and
Holomey was done around 1860 and later about 1872 there was another set working
there. Fowler was one set of engines, the other pair I cannot now remember but
they might well have been Marshall.
These two firms I believe amalgamated later, the name Marshall-Fowler
sticks with me into my own times when we had several tractors of that name
working in Caithness. Good machines too.
In the Highland Agricultural Society Transactions of 1875 an
article on Caithness Agriculture by James Macdonald, Aberdeen Correspondent for
the Scotsman Newspaper, referred to The
Earl of Caithness and his steam ploughing.
The Earl, himself a well-known mechanic, had been working
steam implements for several years by Murray’s Catalogue time of 1878. The Earl
invented a steam-carriage which he steered throughout Caithness, and it was
said excited the wonder and admiration of every one who saw it. It also scared
the h*** out of the horses.
The engines doing
the ploughing were constructed so that they could be used in pumping out
flagstone quarries with which the Earl was involved, particularly at Harrow.
The Earl reclaimed by steam, from heathery moorland, the whole of Philip's
Mains and also Holomey, but the exact dates I am unsure of. Macdonald’s article of 1875 stated that the
Earl was still ploughing and harrowing by steam. It was found to work most
satisfactorily, and the noble Earl intended to continue the system!!.
The article went on to state that at least one-half of the
arable land of Caithness was quite as well adapted for steam cultivation as
Philip's Mains; while a visit to the operations going on at Dalchork at Lairg,
the Duke of Sutherland's property, afforded an excellent opportunity of judging
the advantages of steam in the cultivation of land, and especially in the
re-clamation thereof. Re-clamation actually was not re-clamation, it was
breaking in newly cleared virgin ground covered with heather and various depths
of peat covering the acres of the newly cleared former tenants.
But on a smaller farm scale and for horses G.W.Murray was
making by 1978 a Murison One Way Plough . I do not know who Murison was, did he
work for Murray and design the plough or was he someone whose design was made
by Murray in his Banff Foundry.
. Anyway priced at £10 Sterling for a single furrow plough,
two bodies of course on the whole rig,
with steel Breasts and Shares, £9 with metal Breasts and Shares, 15
shillings extra for a wheel which was recommended, it was within the reach of
most farmers if not crofters. And it was within the strength of a pair of
horses!!
.
No 228 That ole petrol pump.
No 228. That Old Petrol Pump.
“That old petrol pump, she
just keeps pumping, she just keeps pumping along!!”
Not so many around these days. Yet many a crofter might put
one in at the end of his barn to augment his living on hard ground. Sufficient
for small townships and villages, and small towns too, but town ones were
replaced by better pumps as time moved along, leaving the old hand-worked
petrol pump to soldier on in many a remote township. The reservoir tank below
ground was filled from heavy galvanised iron 50 gallon barrels, taken by horse
and cart from the pier in the case of the Stronsay of my youth, or just rolled
up the pier to Davie Chalmers store and his two pumps beside his coal yard. The
pumps were painted green, but you could have whatever colour you wished. Red
was good for obvious reasons.
There was no electricity to power them so petrol was
dispensed by a hand pump that worked with a seesaw backwards and forwards
movement. At the top of the pump assembly were two glass cylinders that contained
the petrol once it had been drawn up by the pump from the underground tank.
Sometimes, depending on the efficiency of the pump, it took
quite a few minutes to prime the cylinders. Then, showing that they were full,
the hose pipe could be turned on by a
top lever and filling the car, or the can as chance would have it, could
begin. The petrol flowed into the car by gravity. The operator had to keep his
or her arm going to keep the flow going, back and fore, back and fore, endless
in the case of a big car, or what we called a big car in these bygone days!!. .
There were no metering devices other than the glass
cylinders which were filled and emptied just so many times to give the required
gallons. Payment of course was by cash,
no credit cards then!!
Towards the end of the War, or rather soon after, we got
five gallon jerricans, near enough 25 litres, weighing about 60 lbs when full.
It is probably illegal to lift such a weight now under Health and Safety rules
and regulations!!! .
Their origin is
interesting. The Africa Corps Germans at El Alamein and other places had them,
and filled their armoured tanks with fuel many times faster than the
traditional British red two gallon square cans. Hence “jerricans”
These original
jerricans had a small tube inside the top which let in air so the flow was not
interrupted by gurgling snatches of air trying to replace the petrol as it was
poured out. Very efficient indeed, they worked very well and the flow was
rapid. They also did not have a screw-on top but a latched lid that snapped
open in one movement when needed. The modern ones still do but with our present
version without the inset tube as far as I have seen, they pour that much less
quickly. Hence the name of “jerrican” comes down to us. They were very
efficient, and I have an old one somewhere still in use for the sit-on
lawnmower.
The other petrol can
was the two gallon can, always red to my memory. There was a green Pratt
can, a red Shell can, a BP can, and no doubt many others . Standard size was two gallons. They had a
flexible steel wound hose pipe which screwed onto the top for pouring, capable
of being bent to whatever angle you wanted. There was always a few of these
cans in the garage.
At the Water Reservoir half way down to Whitehall Village
the engine which pumped the water uphill to our Whitehall Farm House had a
couple of two gallon cans in the wee shed.
Our father would take one down to the Village for re-filling as he
passed by and drop it off at the shed on his return to the farm, stopping the
engine as well. He also had a self timer when needed in only putting a measured
amount of petrol in the engine, having a can for that purpose.
We had other cans for petrol over the years. An empty five
gallon oil can could be used.
When petrol was either rationed or in short supply I had an
old 1927 Austin12 car that ran well on a mixture of half petrol, half tractor
paraffin. It did need to warm up to get the best results, but once warmed up on
petrol alone it would do 60 mph flat out on a level road, on the mixture it did
63.!!
There was a time when to clean an oily greasy tractor we
took about half a bucket of petrol and washed the machine. No smoking!!
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