Do you look forward
to waking up as the sun is rising
over the horizon? I do. My name is Randy, and I live on a farm in
Regina, Canada. My bedroom is on the second floor of
my parent's house, and the horizon looks like sprinkled gold in the morning. My
father is a wheat and cattle
farmer. When I see the golden wheat flowing in the
wind each morning, it looks like millions of swaying dancers, performing a
ballet.
I live in a
province of Canada called Saskatchewan. It‘s an Indian name that came from the
Cree Indians who used to live in this area. The land is very flat here, and you
can see wheat fields in every direction.
One Sunday, I woke
up early and decided to hike toward a city
called Moose Jaw. I left a note for my parents, and off I went.
As I walked through the growing
wheat, I could see thousands of prairie lilies, which meant that the grain was ripening and would
soon be harvested. The prairie lily has three golden
sheaves, and it is part of the Saskatchewan
flag that flies over the capital building
in Regina.
It was about an
hour later that something caught my eye. There in the middle of a wheat field was a man dressed in coveralls who was gathering bunches of
tall wheat strands. As I approached,
I recognized our neighbor, Mr. Pritchard. I was astonished at what he was doing. He had created a straw figure that
stood about three feet tall. The doll-like figure was bent over with a pitchfork
in his hand. I was amazed at Mr. Pritchard‘s skill
at creating a life-like grain
sculpture. Finally he noticed me and smiled.
He invited me to
his house and told me that he would
show me all of his wheat statues. In one corner of his barn, he had a studio. On the
shelves were straw figures of numerous designs
—men driving tractors, horses pulling tillers, women
and children cutting wheat stalks, ladies doing laundry with
old fashioned wash boards, and Canadian Mounties (policemen) on horses.
He saw how
impressed I was,
and handed me a straw figure
of a boy. My mouth opened wide when he told me that I could keep it. As I was
leaving, he said that the next
time I came he would teach me how to make these figures. I couldn't wait to get home and show my parents
my gift and tell them about our neighbor who is a wheat
farmer, as well as an artist.
Map of Nova Scotia. Regina is the capital.
