When Rhonda and I are
off touring around the country it is a ‘game’ of ours to make up seemingly
credible tall tales associated with some aspect of our trip.
We’ve been doing this
since we first met over 40 years ago and we continued it as we grew together and as
Kat, our daughter grew up.
In the beginning it
was all innocent enough – a simple observation by Rhonda - and I carried it on
into a string of “facts” that, at first she was believing, and then realised I
was telling tall fibs and we laughed later about the trip – and that not
only started the tradition it became a base for a ‘common remark’ that brought
us all back together again.
I seem to remember it
was some dairy cows, friesians I believe, on the hillside outside of Kiama, a
coastal areas south of Sydney.
Rhonda commented that
all the cows were walking around the hill facing the same direction. Now,
anyone who knows dairy cows knows that they will always move as a herd in the
same direction – usually from the milking sheds and then back towards them for
the next milking. At least, that’s what my Uncle Bert taught me about his dairy
cows.
Jokingly, I said, ‘That’s
to make sure the milk stays level in their udders!’ She looked at me in
disbelief. So keeping a serious face and talking as if I knew what I was
talking about, I continued. ‘No, seriously, they have two legs shorter than the
other. It’s very common in these parts. It’s because its so steep on these
coastal hillsides, the two short legs are on the up-hill side and the two long
ones on the downhill side.’
We travelled on for a
while. I could see her thinking about it as I stifled the urge to laugh, let
alone smile.
‘What if they want to
go the other way around the hill?’ she asked.
‘Ahhhh! But they don’t,
you see. The milking sheds are on the other side of the hill and they leave
them after being miked and continue their grazing around the hill until they
return outside the shed. In the morning the farmer finds them all lined up in
the yard outside the shed and he’s just got to walk them in, milk them and turn
them out again.’
We drove on in silence
for about another ten minutes.
‘How can he milk them
if they have two legs shorter than the other? You are having me on, aren’t you?’
‘No! No!’, I was quick
to protest. ‘His shed is specially built so that it has a split floor with one
section higher than the other and he just works from the low side. It’s like a
Rota-lactor! You know, one of those circular, automatic, milking sheds. He just
attaches the milking heads to the teats and when she’s finished giving milk
they just drop off. In the meantime she munches on some good lucerne hay as she’s
moved around the milker.’
‘Well, I still think you are having me on!’ she said.
About an hour or so
later we arrived at her parents home, just in time for dinner. As we were
eating she turned to her father, a real knowledgeable man of the world and
asked:
“Dad, do the cows at
Kiama really have two legs shorter than the other to keep the milk level as
they walk around the hillsides?”
Her father stopped in
the middle of his dinner, looked at her studiously and then looked over at
myself. I could almost hear his brain ticking over and I expected a blast from
the father of this innocent girl.
That’s right,’ he
said. 'But its more to stop the cream from slipping off the top of the milk,
darling.’ And he put his head down and went back to his dinner.
There was silence in
the dining area until all of a sudden her mother said:
‘You men, I don’t know
why and how you can be so mean!’
We all looked at each
other and burst out laughing and ever since that day I only have to mention the
milk and the cream or the Kiama cows and Rhonda and I have a good chuckle!
Next time, I'll tell you about "The Pot Hole Men"!
2 comments:
LMAO ... thanks for my first of the day "belly chuckle" from way over here, John !
"Just Me"
Glad you enjoyed it - it's a 'legend' story in our household!
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