The Spanish Padres, as the Mission
priests were called, taught the Indians to plough
and seed with wheat the lands belonging to the church
or Mission. They used a simple wooden plough,
which oxen pulled. When the warm brown earth
was turned up, the Indians broke the clods by dragging
great tree branches over them. After the fall
rains they scattered tiny wheat kernels and covered
them snugly for their nap in the dark ground.
More rain fell, and soon the soaked
seeds waked, and started in slender green shoots to
find the sunshine, and day by day the stalks grew
stronger and the fields greener. Higher and ever
higher sprang the wheat, till summer winds set the
tall grain waving in a sea of green billows.
Have you ever watched the wind blow across a wheat-field?
Over and over the long rollers bend the tops of the
grain, that rise as the breeze goes on and bend low
again at the next breath of wind.
When the hot sun had ripened the grain,
and all round the white-walled, red-roofed Mission
the fields stretched golden and ready for harvest,
the Indians cut the wheat, and scattering the bundles
over a spot of hard ground, drove oxen round and round
on the sheaves till the wheat was threshed out from
the straw. Then Indian women winnowed out the
chaff and dirt by tossing the grain up in the wind,
or from basket to basket, till in this slow way the
yellow kernels were made clean and ready to grind.
A curious mill, called an arrastra,
ground the grain between two heavy stones. A
wooden beam was fastened to the upper stone, and oxen
or a mule hitched to this beam turned the stone as
they walked round. The first flour-mill worked
by water was put up at San Gabriel Mission, and it
was thought a wonderful thing indeed.
Even in those early days California
wheat was known to be excellent, and many ships came
on the South Sea, as they then called the Pacific
Ocean, to load with grain for Mexico or Boston or England.
Since that time our state has fed countless people,
and over a million acres of valley and hill lands
are green and golden every year with food for the
world. To Europe, to the swarming people of China,
Japan, and India, to South Africa and Australia, our
grain is carried in great ships and steamers, and
hungry nations in many lands look to us for bread.
For a long time after the Mission
days, all the grain had to be hauled to the rivers
or sea-coast for shipping. Then the overland railroad
was finished, and within the next fifteen years an
additional two thousand miles of railways were built
in California, and nearly every mile opened up rich
wheat land that had never been cultivated. Soon
great wheat ranches stretched far over the dry, hot
valley plains.
The ground is ploughed and seeded
after November rains, and all winter the tender blades
of grain grow greener and stronger day by day March
and April rains strengthen the crop wonderfully, and
June and July bring the harvest-time. As no rain
falls then, the ripe wheat stands in the field till
cut, and afterward in sacks without harm. All
the work except ploughing is done by machinery, and
this makes the wheat cost less to raise, since a machine
does the work of many men and the expense of running
it is small.
Some of the ranches have three or
four thousand acres in wheat, and it may interest
you to know how such large farms are managed.
The ploughing is done by a gang-plough, as it is called,
which has four steel ploughshares that turn up the
ground ten inches deep. Eight horses draw this,
and as a seeder is fastened to the plough, and back
of the plough a harrow, the horses plough, seed, harrow,
and cover up the grain at one time. There the
seed-wheat lies tucked up in its warm brown bed till
rain and sunshine call out the tiny green spears, and
coax them higher and stronger, and the hot sun of June
and July ripens the precious grain.
Then a great machine called a “header
and thresher” is driven into the field and sweeps
through miles and miles of bending grain, cutting
swaths as wide as a street, and harvesting, threshing,
and leaving a long trail of sacked wheat ready to
ship on the cars. Thirty-six horses draw the
header, and five or six men are needed to attend to
this giant, who bites off the grain, shakes out the
kernels, throws them into sacks and sews them up,
all in one breath, as you might say. The harvesters
work from daylight to dusk, and three-fourths of our
wheat crop is gathered in this way.
Much golden straw is left, besides
that which the “headers” burn as fuel,
and farmers stack this straw for cattle to nibble at.
The stock feed in the stubble fields, too, and strange
visitors also come to these ranches to pick up the
scattered grains of wheat. These strangers are
wild white geese, in such large flocks that when feeding
they look like snow patches on the ground. They
eat so much that often they cannot fly and may be
knocked over with clubs. In the spring these
geese must be driven away by watchmen with shot-guns
to keep them from pulling up the young grain.
The largest single wheat-field in
California is on the banks of the San Joaquin River,
in Madera County. This covers twenty-five thousand
acres and is almost as flat as a floor. It is
nearly a perfect square in shape, and each side of
the square is a little over six miles long. There
are no roads through this solid stretch of grain.
Two hundred men, a thousand horses, and many big machines
are needed to work this wheat-field.
Some of the big harvesters that cut
and thresh the wheat are drawn by a traction-engine
instead of horses. In running a fifty-horse-power
engine high-priced coal had to be burnt but now the
coal grates are replaced by petroleum burners, and
crude coal-oil is the cheap fuel. This does not
make sparks to set the fields on fire like burning
coal or straw and so is safer to use.
On large ranches wheat can be grown
for less than a cent a pound, while it has brought
two cents or double the money when sold. But
there are not always good crops, as the grain needs
plenty of moisture in the spring when rains are uncertain.
The wheat crop of the state has fallen
off of late to less than half the yield of earlier
years, but the deep, rich valley soil still grows
grain enough to feed hungry people in Europe, Asia,
and Africa, as well as in our own Union. Great
quantities are taken in large four-masted ships to
Liverpool, England, and there made into American flour.
Our own flour-mills turn out thousands of barrels of
flour, and this travels far, too. The first thing
picked up in Manila after Admiral Dewey’s victory
was a flour sack with a California mill mark.
It would need a long, long story to
tell how far from home and into what strange places
the yellow kernels of California wheat sometimes travel,
or to picture the odd people who depend upon us for
food.