March brings a much-needed end to winter. Daylight saving time begins March 14 and the first day of spring is the twentieth. It’s a time when dandelions, robins and green grass are a welcome sight.
To me, it’s a new beginning. While I was growing up, my parents rented a farm instead of buying one. Landlords changed tenants March 1 before spring field work began. About every three years, we moved to a different neighborhood. I still remember the five different farm owners we dealt with.
Moving day on a family dairy farm was a big production completed between morning milking and evening milking. Friends, relatives and neighbors were recruited with their pick-up trucks and hayracks. A livestock trucker was hired to move the cows, pigs and horses. Chickens were caught and confined in wooden crates to be transported in the back of pick-ups to their new home. The machinery and household goods were loaded onto hay racks. The women carried precious items with them inside cars.
The three of us only used the main floor of the large, tw0-story homes that rarely had a furnace. Stoves were extinguished and rekindled at the new place. In the kitchen, a cookstove burned kindling or coal briquets. A noon meal was prepared to feed the hungry moving crew. An oil burner heated the living room and two bedrooms.
The following day, I was the new kid among ten or twelve students at the nearby country school.
In 1947, we settled on the Anderson farm northwest of Durand, my home until I married in 1959. My parents stayed there through 1970 when the landlord sold the farm. My folks, who were in their sixties, quit farming and had a home built in Durand. Dad took a job as a school janitor and, for the first time in her life, my mother was ‘just a housewife’.
What does the month of March signify to you?