The summers of 1969 and 1970 were fantastic and unforgettable. The spring of 1969 our football coach arranged a meeting with a man name Dollis Ray. Mr. Ray was recruiting athletic young men to work for Hiwassee Lang Company for the summer.
In the meeting Mr. Ray asked if any of us had ever loaded hale bales or pulpwood. Most of us had hay experience but only a couple of us had both hay and pulpwood experience. He talked of the difficulty of the two jobs and stated to us that the job he was recruiting us to do was harder than both the hay and pulpwood. Our task was injecting hardwood trees with a chemical poison using five feet by two-inch steel pipe filled the chemical using a hand pumped apparatus on the end of the pipe.
Mr. Ray said he was like the Marine Corps. He needed a few good men. So began the work of killing hardwood timber to allow the pines to grow. Areas where the hardwood was dominate; Hiwassee used helicopters to spray (mist blow) the chemical converting lush forest into dead wasteland. Hiwassee did not mist blow long because the government outlawed the practice. We were told that the chemical was weed poison. I believe it was Round Up in its infancy.
The summer of ’69 we started injecting hardwood along US Highway 31 north of Jemison, Alabama. Hiwassee had a ninety-nine-year lease of hundreds of acres. We heard that it was ten thousand acres.
Our foreman was a young man named Benny Lee. Good old southern boys have a double name. Benny Lee was an outdoorsman with a unique Southern Drawl. He instructed us on the injecting technique.
Most of the hardwood we would jab the blade on the end of the pump about two inches apart around the tree. Hickory trees we girdled making sure to place plenty of chemical. Benny Lee had us gather around a large hickory in a low area near a branch. It was about two feet in diameter. We girdled it and Benny Lee who always carried an axe on his shoulder removed the bark of the hickory about three feet above the girdle. Then we all went to dinner.
After dinner, Benny Lee carried us back to the tree. The leaves on this giant hickory had already wilted. The beautiful white meat of the tree had black streaks rising like a thermometer up the tree.
A little later he called us together to watch a moccasin snake trying to kill a king snake. The larger moccasin had the smaller king snake in its mouth. Benny Lee told us that the king snake would kill the moccasin. We all watched in wonder and awe as the king snake slowly wove its body around the moccasin.
Slowly, the king began to tighten its body around the moccasin. We heard bone popping and the moccasin opened it mouth and released the king snake. Benny Lee said, “The king snake will eat the moccasin. The jaws of the king snake unhinged, and the king snake devoured the moccasin.
Working for Hiwassee was not as hard a loading and unloading hay. It was not as tiring as shoulder loading pulpwood. Working for Hiwassee was fun, exciting, full of surprises, and educational. We worked hard for Benny Lee. We worked ourselves out of a job. What was supposed to last most of the summer we completed in two weeks. Benny Lee gave us time off to watch the moon landing in “69.
One day Benny Lee handed me a root and told me to chew it. I had chewed sassafras roots it taste like root beer. I chewed it and he asked me how it tasted. I said, “It tastes like Vicks Salve.” He said that was what the old timers used before the chemical companies started making it.
Another time he handed me a small railroad spike. He asked, “What to you see on the side of the hill?” I told him that it looks like an old road. He said that it was a railroad bed where there had been a spur when the built Lay Dam on the Coosa River. All that was visible was spikes along the way.
We had so many adventures that summer. We pushed down dead trees, found bee gums, played king of the mountain on old sawdust piles from sawmills long forgotten, and run from yellow jacket wasps and hornets. After work we would drag race our old jalopies.
It was hard work! It prepared us for two-a-days football practice. It taught us that it’s not work if you enjoy it. It was a rite of passage for young boys becoming men.
And whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men - Colossians 3:23