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I took my Gatorade yesterday around 2:30-3:00 and even with a 5
minute water break restored me well. Today I put two bottles in
the cooler and I had one at 10:00AM and the other at 2:00PM,
with the water I drank it was the best I could do. I say that
because without being gross, I learned in my high school
athletic days how to measure your hydration by observing the
color of your urine. Too much yellow and you need more water.
I haven’t had a day that it was ideal. I don’t get really
hydrated until I get back to the camp where I chug more water
and another bottle of Gatorade. I regret not following through
with getting a canteen to bring on this trip. This idea might
have some merits as standard equipment for tobacco workers.
I had chicken tenders for lunch again today as I didn’t do too
well with the rib eye steak sandwich yesterday. It seemed too
heavy to digest under the heat stress we were under. I thought
of what I’d rather have and I was imagining some fidello
(thin spaghetti) with a little “carne picada” (hamburger
meat) mixed up with garlic and unions in a little tomato sauce.
Then some fruit for dessert! Oh my, it was a nice daydream
munching on my tenders. We did have watermelon though. Earlier
this morning the one they call Shorty had pilfered a watermelon
from the farmer who rents the land. The farmer has watermelon
and cantaloupe patches all around the tobacco field. He had
been visiting our fields the last two days and usually mooches a
soft drink (Dr. Pepper) from our cooler when he visits.
He likes to talk and is always driving on of those 4-wheel
recreational bikes. He was bragging about those watermelon
patches and his tomato and jalapeno ones too. He only had to
invite us once to take what we wanted. Since we had just
finished the field we were in, we quickly gathered several plush
watermelons, cantaloupes, and a plastic bag full of jalapeños!
Shorty came walking up last as he had gone back to fetch his
prize watermelon that he had stashed out of sight. He was
smiling from ear to ear in front of the farmer seemingly pleased
that he wasn’t stealing it. I told him to put it in the ice
cooler so we could eat it for lunch. It hit the spot, lots of
water and sugar for dessert that sent us back into the broiling
sun.
My body seems to be holding up okay as the damage has been
limited to some sunburn on my nose and face, a slight rash on my
calves and ankles and swollen hands. The men say the rash is
from the sand and the tiny particles that penetrate your pants
when you pull the large stalks of Kelite and all the dirt is
dumped on your shins on down. My hands are sore but that is
pretty normal because I’ve been snapping tops and pulling Kelite
stalks. They do ache at night like any part of your body
that’s used after an arduous task.
Although there has been some stressful moments from the heat,
the men’s attitude of helping on another makes a big
difference. When you’re pressing for a water break, the men who
finish first come back and help the rest. This has helped me
since earlier this week; I had to struggle to keep up with the
rest. As I’ve gotten accustomed as to what to look for I’ve
been able to keep pace especially with rows with a lot of Kelite.
I remember more and more doing it in my younger years and have
recovered my efficiency at it. I’m a regular weed eater but it
is harder on your back which is a little tight but it works.
Caballo and one they call Negro told me the reason they help
each other stay close as a crew.
A little after 3:00 PM a welcomed cloud cover came upon us as a
thunderstorm was raging northwest of us. Shortly after that,
another wave of darker clouds moved in on us that had rain. The
guys said that it made it simpler to get everyone in vehicles at
a time like this to get out of the field together when
everybody’s in one place. Well, the rains came! This
is the earliest time we quit this week, I don’t think we made it
to 4:00 PM.
Getting to the camp early, I was able to do a wash with some
gift of soap from Caballo for the washing machine which the
farmer has here. I brought four shirts to wear every day and
today I wore my last one. Someone always invites me to eat with
them and today Caballo prepared some meat with papitas (fried
potatoes,) frijoles and a guacamole pico de gallo while I did
laundry. After I hung my clothes on the clothesline outside, I
had this great meal waiting!
Editor’s Note: Beginning July 27, 2008, Baldemar Velásquez,
President of FLOC, worked the tobacco fields in North Carolina.
In Part I, Baldemar stated that: “North Carolina leads the
nation in heat stroke deaths,…when men are not only battling the
heat but also nicotine poisoning. The workers FLOC represents
harvest 26 different crops, ranging from cucumbers to tobacco to
Christmas trees. In my farmwork history, I’ve worked in all
those harvests or close to them, row crops, bush or tree crops,
but never anything close to tobacco with its particular
challenges.” Experience Baldemar’s sojourn in “Call to the
Fields.” Parts I-V appear online below.
Photos by Christiana Velasquez
Call to the Fields Part V
Call to the Fields Part IV
Call to the
Fields Part III
Call to the Fields Part II
Call to the Fields |