Sport and Work on the Nepaul Frontier - Twelve Years Sporting Reminiscences of an Indigo Planter by James Inglis
page 136 of 347 (39%)
page 136 of 347 (39%)
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Taking vegetables, or rice, or other commodities to the bazaar, the
carrier often slings his burden to the two ends of a pole worn over the shoulder, much as Chinamen do. But they generally make their load into one bundle which they carry on the head, or which they sling, if not large and bulky, over their backs, rolled up in one of their cloths. During the rice-planting season they toil in mud and water from earliest morn till late into twilight. Bending and stooping all the day, their lower extremities up to the knee sometimes in water, and the scorching sun beating on their backs, they certainly show their patient plodding industry, for it is downright honest hard work. The young rice is taken from the nursery patch, where it has been sown thick some time previously. When the rice-field is ready--a sloppy, muddy, embanked little quagmire--the ryot gets his bundle of young rice-plants, and shoves in two or three at a time with his finger and thumb. These afterwards form the tufts of rice. Its growth is very rapid. Sometimes, in case of flood, the rice actually grows with the rise of the water, always keeping its tip above the stream. If wholly submerged for any length of time it dies. There are over a hundred varieties. Some are only suited for very deep marshy soils; others, such as the _s[=a]tee_, or sixty-days rice, can be grown on comparatively high land, and ripen early. If rain be scanty, the _s[=a]tee_ and other rice crops have to be weeded. It is cut with a jagged-edged sort of reaping-hook called a _hussooa_. The cut bundles are carried from the fields by women, girls, and lads. They could not take carts in many instances into the swamps. At such times you see every little dyke or embankment with a crowd of bustling villagers, each with a heavy bundle of grain on his head, |
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