014—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 12,1980 Sights and sounds of an awakening land BY DICK ANGLESTEIN LANCASTER COUNTY - The land awakens in many different ways. A wanning wind whirs through trees which yawn and stretch their bareness as if shedding the final kinks and stiffness of a long and deep slumber. Each small, swaying brown tentacle is tipped with the beginning of a new life that will soon burst forth into a cloak of green. The wind’s whir is never constant. As a whisper, it gently nudges the budding bran ches into a lazy, bobbing motion. Suddenly, the volume accelerates into partially a whine and partially a whistle, pitching and rolling the trees’ fragile framework frantically. Then, the ever rising and falling natural whir is mixed with a steady mechanical drone off in the distance. The mobile, mechanized hum comes from several directions all at once. The wrap-around stereo sound of man and machine flows forth from a colorful collage of green, brown and white. Across a rolling field of emerging green, the source of one such sound moves systematically to and from a bam with twin cylindrical towers. The red tractor tows an empty spreader toward tne bam and returns with heapmg contents for casting across the land. Drifting from another direction is a similar sound that comes from a tractor more blue than the sky overhead. Tugging and pulling slowly over a field of brown, it cuts and chisels into the earth, churning the smooth, dull shade of ground m front into a deeper, richer hue that follows on behind. And out of yet another mechanical dm, massive willowy clouds of white erupt m great, smoky puffs. In the wake of the explosion of white, a powdery dust settles to the earth like newly falling snow. Not too far from these varied mechanical agricultural awakening activities, an elderly couple moves silently and slowly through a field. She carries a small pail and he grasps a small knife. He eases into a slow motion stoop and swirls the knife deftly around the base of a flat, spmy plant, neatly cutting the single root. Into her pail is tossed the plant, which in not too many weeks would blossom forth into the bright yellow of a miniature vegetative sun. But for now, covered with a warm bacon dressing, it becomes a tangy dinner salad for the aged gleaning couple. Even the final remnants of a half-year-old harvest are being completed in still another nearby field. Com stalks, flattened by the winter’s snow that followed last fall’s combining, are being fluffed by a rake. A baler, just pulled from storage, stands waiting to collect and pack the fodder before the field can be prepared to launch another season of growth. In addition to man and his machines, animals are to be - ~ tec**.. increasingly found on the awakening land. More and more, splashes of black and white are dotting the greening hillsides. Seemingly anxious to be free of the confinement and concrete of bams, they contentedly settle down onto the warming earth or amble aimlessly back and forth. Stirring also are sheep still bulging with winter’s wrapping of wool. As tem peratures continue to gradually climb, they ap pear to sense the fast ap proaching tune to be shed of the fleecy, soft coats. As observed from an elevated view, the quilt-hke patchwork of an awakening land is fast taking shape. With a needle of spreading warmth, each day sews a new patch into the farmland fabric. Here, a field is turning a deepening green. There, another field is plowed into a dark, nch brown. And over there, lime turns a field dusty white. But even as April brings the land back to life and its caretakers to ever in creasing levels of outside activity, a reminder or two ' r \' of the faded and forgotten winter remain. Large mounds of wood are neatly stacked next to many farm houses and rural homesteads as monuments to a season just past. Now, it is a tune that these stacks will lie idle and unused. So, the cycle of pastoral contrasts goes on. A time for awakening and activity. And a tune to he fallow and rest. €