Then and Now

Page 1

Berthoud Weekly Surveyor June 26, 2014 Page 5

A LOOK AT BERTHOUD

It’s irrigating season in the Little Thompson Valley N

ot that many years ago, a farmer irrigating his crops was a common summer sight in the fields around Berthoud. Rubber hip boots, a straw hat, bib overalls and, Then & Now more often than not, a Surveyor long-sleeved shirt, characColumnist terized the dress of these farmers who tended their water through the heat of the day and the cool of the night. The amount of ditch water available to them was limited to the number of shares they owned, so little was wasted during an irrigation season that Mark extended from May to French September. Many of the old irrigation practices have changed with the use of modern, center-pivot sprinklers, but the need for crop irrigation will not diminish as long as there is farming in the Little Thompson Valley. A canvas dam, that measured perhaps fourby-six feet, and sharp-point shovel were essential irrigation tools for the early farmer. Once a

farmer stopped the flow of water in a ditch by setting a canvas dam, he made a series of shallow cuts in the ditch bank to direct the water toward the field. Then he shoveled shallow channels from the cuts to the crop rows so the water could start its downhill trickle to the lower end of the field. While setting a dam in a ditch required some experience and skill, shoveling channels from the cuts in the ditch bank to the crop rows demanded tedious, back-bending work. In many cases, the channels dug for the first crop irrigation could be used again during subsequent irrigations. Irrigating also required farmers to walk a great deal. After the water was directed into the rows at the high end of a field, the farmer slogged a good distance to the bottom of the field to see which rows had been soaked. Upon his return to the top of the field, the farmer blocked the channels leading to the soaked rows to avoid wasting water by running it over ground that was already wet. In the 1920s, J.P. Thompson, who had a harness shop in Berthoud, invented a leather “heel and boot protector” that was marketed to farmers who were plagued by discomfort that resulted from their socks sagging and bunching up in backs of their irrigation boots. His device, that was intended to prevent blisters and sock

heels from wearing through, consisted of thin leather straps that were strapped around the heel and tightened with small metal buckles. Thompson patented his invention, and in 1924 sold it to a national company. There is an example of Thompson’s heel and boot protector in the collection of the Berthoud Historical Society. The snapshot that accompanies this article shows John Waggener, Sr. and a hired man posing for a photo while irrigating a crop. Even though local farmers spent endless hours irrigating, such photographs are seldom found in family photo albums. Jane Waggener Vielehr, who is the granddaughter of John Waggener Sr., contributed the photograph for this article. Jane’s father, who was John Waggener Jr., is well-remembered in the Berthoud community. The farm remains in the Waggener family and is located in the Sunnyside district northeast of Berthoud.

Photo courtesy of Jane Vielehr

John Waggener Sr. (right) and a hired hand (left) paused while irrigating to pose for a snapshot. Photos of farmers at work are surprisingly scarce and highly prized by the Berthoud Historical Society.

Kids get busy this summer at the Berthoud Community Library By Pam Martin Special to the Surveyor

Teens and tweens got their “hands on” some DNA on Tuesday, June 10, as CU Science Discovery educator, Kat Penzkover, took an enthusiastic group through the stages of extraction. Kids smashed strawberries, then strained out the pulp, added detergent (to break down the cell walls), poured in some rubbing alcohol and then patiently watched as the DNA precipitated upward, looking very much like “snot,” according to one observant source. Strawberries make a great laboratory subject because they’ve got lots of DNA; eight sets of chromosomes in every cell to be precise, which is one

key to why they make such tenacious ground cover. “Attendance for the Summer Reading Program has been awesome,” said Youth Services Librarian Christy Headrick. “For the teens, especially, we’ve already beat our highest attendance record from last year with 25 kids [for DNA Extraction].” Hands were clapping and patting thighs in time to the Amber Waves Band, which took to the stage in the Berthoud Community Center on Wednesday, June 11. As part of the library-sponsored Fizz, Boom, Read program for ages birth-11, this family-friendly performance had kids (and Headrick) dancing in the aisles. Audience members were shown what distinguishes music that’s made for

Look at Loveland

folk, as in, why “fiddling” is different from playing the violin (even though they’re the same instrument). Then after a brief instruction on how a reel’s tempo is different from a jig’s, band mom, Cheryl Costello, left the mic so that daughter, Alexandra, could treat the audience to vocal stylings with the soul of bluegrass. Please join the Berthoud Community Library District on Tuesday, July 1 from 2 – 4 p.m. for the teen program face-off on who knows the book best? The Book Duel (extra copies on hand of “A Wrinkle in Time”). For kids, join us on Wednesday, July 2 from 2 – 4 p.m. for the Space Alien’s Big Bang Show; humor, magic, and juggling — oh my.

PLEASE RECYCLE THIS NEWSPAPER

Photo by Pam Martin

Local children participate in a DNA education presentation at the Berthoud Community Library on June 10, where the learned about DNA extraction.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.