February 13, 1969 – South Arcola, Saskatchewan
It has been more than fifty years since I milked a cow. Some things you just don’t forget.
- The handle on the milk pail clangs as I take it down from the drying shelf.
- Out the door at 7:15 on a February morning.
- The morning cold is held at bay by thick barn clothes but awakens my face.
A familiar crunch of snow along the path to the barn.
- Early light creeps up the chicken house wall as I pass by, the hens are still fast asleep.
- Frost on the barn door latch.
- A riot of smells and textures inside, humidity, manure, and semi-darkness.
- “Good morning, Kitty”.
- I toss two flakes of hay from a bale into the manger.
- Open the reluctant sliding door to the back of the barn.
- Guernsey trundles to her stall and puts her face in the hay without so much as a “Thank You”.
- I place a chain around her neck, so she doesn’t wander mid-milking.
- There is a plastic bucket to sit on (no three-legged stool designed not to wobble for this dairy).
- Guernsey has an over-full bag this morning, evening milking was early.
- A quick dusting of teats to remove any flakey debris and I get to work.
- One knee up against the cow’s leg – if she primes for a kick, I will get an early warning.
- It is winter, no need to wedge the tail between my knee and her leg, she won’t be swatting flies today.
- I place the milk pail with the strainer side to the rear and start on the two front teats.
- They don’t need a lot of priming, just a couple of pulls and the milk flows.
- “Pulls” is a bad word. Neither Guernsey nor I, like it.
- A rhythmic massage is the best way to coax milk – and not get kicked.
- The cat has been patient until now. She is standing on her hind legs, with her forepaws on my thigh.
- “I am not feeding you here, we will get soaked”. I push Kitty back into the alley where she belongs.
Several well aimed streams. The cat’s pink tongue can barely keep up.
- There is enough milk on her face to keep Kitty occupied cleaning herself while I finish milking.
- The front of the bag is deflated, time for the rear.
- Guernsey has finished her breakfast flakes; she looks back over her shoulder at me.
- “Okay, two more”. If she’s happy, I’m happy.
- I sit back down on the plastic pail and turn the milk pail around.
- To reach the back teats, I put the top of my head in that hollow spot where the leg meets the cow.
- Tucked into a milk cow’s rear hip is a comfortable place to be, in winter.
- The back valves are fatter and shorter than the front. It is more difficult to aim for the pail.
- The self-cleaned cat is back for more, but I can’t squirt from this angle.
- A stream of warm milk runs down my hand and drips off my elbow.
- The milk pail is nearly full, but Guernsey’s reservoir isn’t quite empty yet.
- My fingers are tired.
- Why am I doing this? It is 1969 for crying out loud! Other people buy milk from the store.
- They do, but it isn’t the same. Guernsey’s milk produces cream that makes the best fudge ever.
- The milking is done, so is Guernsey. She twitches her hip, a sign that her patience has worn thin.
- I lift the pail with aching forearms, and dormant knees.
- I set the precious cargo where a retreating cow and a greedy cat can’t reach it.
- Guernsey gets a pat on the rump, and Kitty gets a dribble in her dirty bowl.
- Back out in the cold.
- Fifty years pass as I carry milk from the barn to…
… The Separator.
Article published in Winter 2022 edition of Folklore – Saskatchewan’s Yesterdays Personified
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