Some notes of my earliest life
I grew up in sugar country. A crushing mill below
1948
Cowley beach
At one stage, I am not exactly sure when but it was before I was of
school age, probably aged 5, that the family moved and lived in a cane-cutter's barracks at
Cowley Beach.
Barracks were provided by farmers to house the itinerant
caneİcutters who came North for the crushing season. I gather that in
the "off" season they were usually let out free to locals whom the
farmer knew. It helped keep them maintained.
So there my
mother had a wood (burning) stove and no electricity. I remember the
carbide lamps and hurricane lamps we used for lighting at night.
The
walls were of corrugated iron and I seem to recollect drinking brackish
water there so maybe we relied on a well for water.
I am pretty sure
we had a kerosene fridge there that didn't work very well and I
remember my mother using a Coolgardie safe and water bag.
Since then I have always liked the design of cane barracks -- a
big kitchen/dining room at one end and a straight line of bedrooms
running off it and accessed from a verandah.
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E.&O.E.
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Email me (John Ray) as jonjayray@hotmail.com