We
learned Nature Study - in the field – literally speaking! We could identify every flower and plant,
every bird and beast, trees and insects too. We learned all the practical household skills of the time: cooking, sewing, knitting, darning,
pattern-making and their use in clothes making. Cleaning, of course. Our
grounding in English and Mathematics was second to none.
We
had time for fun and devilment too! I
remember well the time I pushed Bridgie Keenan, who lived in the second house
up the brae from us, on the road to school, into the river and soaked her to
the skin! It happened by accident!
Steve
Bellew was eating his lunch on the low wall and that lunch was wrapped in
beautiful, shiny silver paper. Being a
boy, he just cast it aside, not appreciating its attraction. Well, Bridgie and I made a dive at it
together. I got it, but in the push, she
went right into the river! She had to walk the long road home and her dripping!
For
three weeks my bothers and sisters and I had to take to the fields when we got
close to the Keenan’s house on the way to and from school. Bridgie’s father was well-known as a tarror
and a targe!