Mr. Grady Rose traded hogs and raised watermelons, a brilliant plan. During that period, Bossier Parish, Louisiana, had open range laws. That meant livestock was free to roam, decreasing the responsibility of the farmer and making driving after dark a challenge. Motorists were responsible for damages, should they be careless enough to hit one. Black livestock presented a real challenge at night since they were cloaked in invisibility. Passengers, as well as the driver, watched for livestock. The ever-present threat of livestock certainly cut down on speeding. Contrary to what you might expect, accidents were rare.
The point of this story is that Mr. Grady was deeply involved in the hog business, a vocation that required a great deal of work, but little cash outlay. With captive labor in his boys, it was an ideal career choice. The hogs ran wild in the woods, feeding on acorns and other vegetation. In the spring he baited catch pens in the woods with corn to catch his own marked sows and any unmarked sows with new litters. Mr. Rose cut his mark in the piglet’s ears, castrated the males, and turned them loose to grow. Rounding up wild hogs was an exciting and dangerous business. These feral beasts did not submit. Cornered, they slashed at men and dogs. A few months after marking, the pens were baited again to catch the yearling pigs for slaughter or personal use, or take to market. Uncastrated adult males, or boars were not good eating, due to their hormone load. Catching the hogs was dangerous business. Adult males had sharp, curved tusks and fought fiercely, especially when penned up. They’d also attack in the woods.
Hog hunting was considered fine sport by many. Hunters were likely to shimmy up a tree to escape an attacking boar. One hunter in Mr. Rose’s party had lost a leg above the knee as an infant. As agile as the rest, he was known to hop atop his crutch to escape an attacking hog.
I remember Daddy stitching up his lacerated dogs after a hunt, though he used a doctor’s services for his own cuts.
It was a grave offense to tamper with animals with another man’s mark. Marks were well-known by other hog farmers in the community, so word was passed on to neighbors what part of the woods a man’s hogs had recently occupied, making it easier to track them. Of course, one couldn’t expect to harvest all the hogs bearing his mark, but it was a good crop. No man wanted word to get around that his mark was found on young pigs following a sow with another man’s mark. Men have been shot for that!
Once captured, Mr. Rose penned hogs up at his farm to fatten. That’s where the melons came in. They were a cheap, abundant crop, easily harvested. The hungry hogs gorged on the fat melons that burst when tossed in the pens. It looked for all the world like a bloody battle as they squealed, grunted, and gobbled their way aggressively through the heap. I never got enough of watching.
Mother usually bought melons from peddlers who drove through the neighborhood selling from the back of their truck. One kid would flag while the others ran around like mad trying to find enough change to purchase a melon which commonly sold for a dollar, but if the peddler came at the end of the day and wanted to unload, we might get two for a dollar. I never got satisfied on melon and would eat as close into the rind as possible, trying to get every sweet taste. I was stunned to see Mr. Grady break a fine melon, pass the heart to an incredulous kid and toss the rest to the hogs. I’d never experienced such luxury.
I was bereft at being left at home when Daddy loaded his excited dogs to go hog-hunting. I promised myself I’d go hog- hunting when I got grown. So far, I haven’t remembered to do it.

Master Reeve’s bondsman gestured for Andrew and Molly to follow while he bundled their order. He wrapped cord around the linsey-woolsey so it could be packed more easily. The rest of the items went into a neat paper-wrapped bundle of a weight Molly could manage, talking to the all the while. “I am Jeffers and bound for six more years. Wharton seems a hard but fair man. I hope to see you in town sometimes, or on Sunday when our time is our own. I wish you Godspeed.” With that, he hoisted and settled the heavy bundle of yard goods on Andrew’s back and loaded Molly’s arms with her parcels.
“What have we gotten into?” moaned Andrew after three days locked in the hold. “Why did we Ever do this? I’ve got to figure a way out.”
Over the next few years, their brood grew to include seven. The boys were tall and strong, a lot of help to Eddie, so he didn’t need Neeley’s help so much. A stern taskmaster, he was apt to take his belt to the boys should they dally. When Will, their third son was about eight, he was given the task of planting corn as his older brothers made up the rows on either side of him. The rows seemed to stretch on forever and his back ached with bending and planting four kernels per hills ten to twelve inches apart. He fell further and further behind. Desperate to catch up, he buried a big pile of seed in one hill and caught up to his brothers. It rid him of so much of the accursed seed, he repeated the process up and down the rows, finishing up in time with the rest. He thought no more about it, glad to be done with the onerous task of planting. Several evenings later, Eddie went out one bright moonlit night to check to see if his corn had sprouted late that afternoon. Indeed it had, but not all in rows like he expected. Big clumps of corn sprouts stood in patches up and down the rows. Infuriated, he knew immediately what Will had done. He strode toward the house, determined to set the boy straight. In their exhaustion, the three boys had gone to bed immediately after supper. Eddie stomped into the room snatching the covers back from the sleeping boys and started beating them with his belt. Though Will got the worst of it, the other boys suffered welts, too. Neeley heard the screams from the kitchen and burst in to stop Eddie. In his fury, he didn’t seem to notice her. Neeley .. got the fireplace poker and got between him and the boys, beating him about the shoulders. Finally, she stood him off. Threatening to crack him over the head, she assured him she’d kill him if she had to. In the face of her ferocity, he backed down, putting himself on one side of a wall and herself and the kids on another. This was repeated several times over the next few years, made worse as the boys’ hormones kicked in and Eddie aged. Neeley wondered if his meanness was due to his head jury or his nature. It could have been a combination since Eddie had learned violence at he hands of his own father, many years earlier.
“It’s All Fun and Games till Somebody Loses an Eye!”