[Ag-eq] Horses

nfoster at extremezone.com nfoster at extremezone.com
Wed Sep 30 17:06:49 UTC 2015


Greg:

I don't think I've ever seen you post here before; I hope you will share with us
more often.

Where are you from?

It would be nice to get more people active here and in the division.

The Arkansas state NFB convention is this weekend and I plan on making an
announcement about the division.  Maybe we could all do that to remind people
that we are out here.

Does anyone know if there is a way to see how many people are on our list and in
our division?

I would really like to see us get more active.

nella
Quoting Greg Williams via Ag-eq <ag-eq at nfbnet.org>:

> Jewel:
> It looks like Nella is right based on what I found on google. There are
> several old newspaper articles which make mention of a prize winning
> draft stallion named Barron Bold in New Zealand and his progeny from
> 1914 on. They are scanned from old papers and not perfect, but here are
> two articles you might find interesting:
> http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/24952099 and
>
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Xt_UxvR2uO8J:paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast%3Fa%3Dd%26d%3DODT19140925.2.39+&cd=3&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
> I enjoyed reading your father's articles as I enjoy reading yours.
> Greg
>
>
> On 9/11/2015 8:16 AM, Nella Foster via Ag-eq wrote:
> > Jewel:
> >
> > This is beautiful; I hope you will share some mor of your Father's writings
> with
> > us.  He painss a great picture with words.
> >
> > I've never heard of a Baron Bold, wonder if it could be certain blood lines
> > wwithin another breed?
> >
> > I'll try some google searchs later to see if I can find anything.
> >
> > Nella
> > Quoting Jewel via Ag-eq <ag-eq at nfbnet.org>:
> >
> >> I, recently, found a collection of the articles that my father had had
> >> published in the years
> >> 1969/74 in several newspapers for which he was a freelance correspondent.
> I
> >> have had them recorded
> >> so that Jaws can read them.
> >> I have reproduced one here which tells of the pre-tractor ploughing match
> >> when it was still the
> >> patient heavy horse that provided the power, and as I don't think that the
> >> ones Dad knew in the
> >> first 30 years of the 20th century would differ much
> >> from the ones that aged American farmers would recall with nostalgia, I
> hope
> >> that you will derive
> >> some enjoyment from reading it.
> >> However, I have an ulterior motive, to whit,  there is, what I think must
> be
> >> a typo, and I wondered
> >> if any of you could supply a correction?
> >> In this article, which is coming up, Dad writes of a scottish breed of
> draft
> >> horse called the "Baron
> >> Bold"  I had never heard of it, and neither, I find,  have the know-it-all
> >> experts of Wikipedia.
> >> and now here is the Ploughing Match.
> >>
> >> So farm life bustled along, grain thrashed, sheep shorn, chaff cut. Surely
> >> time to rest and
> >> relax-but no chance, the annual ploughing match was at hand.
> >> What an eagerly awaited event, compare to today's effort, when tractors
> and
> >> tense competitors turn
> >> over the fields to a silent, if appreciative audience.
> >> Three Classes
> >> The district ploughing match of half a century back was a full day event.
> All
> >> horse teams, generally
> >> divided into three classes for hopeful juniors, past and present
> champions,
> >> men wise and experienced
> >> in turning over the soil.
> >> To most people, a plough was merely a plough. But not to the champion
> >> competitor. Each implement was
> >> an individual to be nursed along with secret settings, and manipulations
> of
> >> nuts and bolts.
> >> Every aged retired former champion would be in big demand for advice and
> >> assistance from young
> >> fellows with eyes set upon rural glory.
> >> In the lower classes, competition was just as keen, younger sons or
> brothers
> >> were keyed up to fight
> >> their way up through the ranks. Results were often on par with the top
> grade
> >> and some first year
> >> competitor with a fine effort, would find himself overnight promoted to
> >> Champion class.
> >> A word for the magnificent four or six horse teams. Originally, the heavy
> >> draft horses held sway,
> >> but latterly, the showy Baron Bold breed was predominant.
> >> Baron Bold, an import from Scotland, almost revolutionized the working
> farm
> >> horse in Southland,
> >> producing a lighter, clean legged animal, a showy type, sporting white
> face
> >> and legs.
> >> The preparation of the team was all a matter of choice, keenness and hard
> >> work.
> >> Mane and tails were washed (with no detergents available) while coats were
> >> groomed, combed and
> >> brushed repeatedly, hooves were oiled and varnished after a visit to the
> >> blacksmith, a skilled
> >> tradesman who worked long weary hours at his forge, as team after team
> >> received his attention.
> >> All harness had a spectacular look, with special high collars decorated
> with
> >> gay ribbons and
> >> tinkling bells; certainly each team when assembled and hitched  to their
> >> plough was the centre of
> >> all admiring eyes.
> >> The ploughman knew his plough and his team and worked both skillfully; the
> >> horses in turn knew their
> >> role and reinsman. What a great sight when a full field of such performers
> >> were all in action.
> >> Apart from actual ploughing, there were always special prizes, keenly
> sought
> >> after.
> >> The competitor with the largest family, a keen contest over the years
> between
> >> two veterans, first
> >> prize appropriately being two sacks of flour.
> >> Other specials, the youngest ploughman, the smartest turnout and best team
> of
> >> mares.
> >> The pastoral Queen of today was missing the horses were the STARS.
> >> Ploughing matches had plenty of sidelines, a large tent for women to
> display
> >> their art, jams,
> >> pickles, and butter, not forgetting, embroidery, knitting and sewing.
> >> Children were not excluded, but generally
> >> were too busy consuming fizzy drinks and romping in lolly scrambles.
> >> Guile, Cunning
> >> On a nearby field, the annual Rugby match would be under way, married men
> v
> >> single, a contest of
> >> guile and cunning against youth and vigour, with many stops to attend the
> >> wounded and winded.
> >> Tossing the sheaf was a matter of some skill, not necessarily strength.
> Each
> >> year would produce the
> >> same, good keen men, as they tossed. Nearby, some big ponderous men
> grunted;
> >> these were Cumberland
> >> wrestlers, who heaved and puffed with not much action but they still had
> >> their admirers amidst the
> >> thud of trampling horses, tinkling bells and noisy footballers.
> >> What a day for children, usually dressed in their best, but not for long;
> >> boys were soon bedraggled,
> >> covered in dust and debris. They were rounded up for a huge lunch, then
> >> bursting at the seams were
> >> off again.
> >> One thing was certain nobody ever lost a child at a ploughing match!
> >>
> >>            Jewel
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
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