Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.09.2017, Qupperneq 5

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.09.2017, Qupperneq 5
VISIT OUR WEBSITE WWW.LH-INC.CA Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1. september 2017 • 5 They say that in Medieval times, the weather was warm enough that grain could ripen in Iceland. The historians know this because they found tax records that show grain being imported from Iceland. It was probably barley. That leaves all sorts of questions. How was the soil tilled, the seed sown, and the grain reaped? Barley was grown in Scandinavia. Some rye was grown. In Norway, oats were an important crop. Beans, turnips, and flax were grown. In Norway, apples were cultivated. In Scandinavia, ploughs were definitely used in medieval times. One must assume that, since the settlers in Iceland came largely from Norway but also from other countries that grew grain, Icelandic landholders would know about ploughs and ploughing. There is some evidence that the early settlers did try ploughing but circumstances were against it. It caused rapid erosion. Valuable land washed away. These early settlers also had goats and pigs but they disappeared and that probably was because they destroyed precious land. Then, to make matters worse, there was the changing weather. According to The Cambridge History of Scandinavia, Volume 1, there had been a long period of warm years. Warm enough that Iceland remained largely ice-free. Warm enough that grain could ripen. That was going to change. The Little Ice Age (1300-1850) began and the temperatures and the frost-free days needed for grain to ripen disappeared. Harsh winters and cold summers meant hay didn’t grow and without hay people had to slaughter their sheep and horses. Europe lived on cereal grains. In Iceland that became impossible. With the colder weather, the only crop became hay. On it, all life, animal and human, would depend. So, with the Little Ice Age, conditions changed but the Icelanders were determined to stay where they were. One percent of the land was grazeable. Not arable. Not cultivatable. Sheep, horses, and cows could graze upon it. It was madness, of course. The forests that had provided fuel, charcoal, and wood for building got used up. The sheep made sure the forests didn’t grow back. Over time, the grazeable land became smaller. Expanding glaciers, volcanic eruptions, but most of all, erosion, destroyed hay land. The Icelanders doubled down. They might have been great adventurers in Viking times but by medieval times they were herders. Their insistence on staying in Iceland demanded that they find ways to adapt to the harsh landscape and the deteriorating weather. For example, salt was expensive. They couldn’t make their own in spite of all the seawater around them. In Norway, the people had fuel so they could boil seawater. In Iceland, fuel was too precious, too scarce. They could make black salt by burning seaweed. Instead of salting cod, they dried it. They learned to preserve meat in whey. They figured out not to eat fresh deep-sea shark but to bury it in the cold sand so the uric acid would dissipate enough for the flesh to be safe to eat. Who, I’ve often asked myself, figured that out? Did some Icelander say to himself, Fúsi, that friend of mine, was starving and he ate a chunk of a washed up shark half buried in the sand and died. Six months later, I was starving and I cut a chunk off the shark carcass. It tasted terrible, but I didn’t die. Ergo, we need to let it rot a bit before eating it. Starvation always lurked. Otherwise, who would have chosen to eat rotten shark? The Danes get blamed for a lot of things but they should get credit for something really important, the Icelandic potato. In 1758, a Swede working in Iceland as an expert in sheep farming, planted potatoes but nothing came of it. In 1759, a minister, Björn Halldórsson, got some potatoes from Denmark and planted them. This time, some other people also started growing potatoes. Then, in 1808, the Danish merchant, Hans Lever, planted potatoes in his back yard in Akureyri and wrote a publication called Instructions in potato cultivation for the common people of Iceland. The people of Akureyri started growing potatoes. You never know where this sort of radical innovation might lead and, in this case, it led to other vegetables being grown, and then flowers. You have to keep in mind that there were quite a few Danes in Akureyri. That may explain the potato fields that developed. The Icelanders eyed the potatoes suspiciously and spread the rumour that eating them caused leprosy. Given the Icelandic conservatism regarding food, it is surprising that, by 1862, fifty-four years after Hans planted potatoes in his garden, potatoes had become so much a part of the Icelandic diet that when the same potato blight that had devastated Ireland appeared in Iceland, five percent of the population died. The potato – that pile of red, white, yellow, sometimes purple spuds in the grocery store – is so common that we never give it a second thought. We just pick up a five-pound bag and place it in the grocery cart. When I was young, we didn’t buy our potatoes this way. Mostly, we planted them in our backyard and, in the fall, when the tops had died back, we took a garden fork and turned over the soil. We picked up the potatoes, rubbed the soil off them, and put them into a gunnysack that we then stored in the basement, out of the light. They would last most of the winter. We also celebrated this kitchen garden harvest by my father building a small fire in the back yard, adding wood to it until there was a good bed of coals. Then he would pack potatoes in Manitoba clay and place them among the coals. When the potatoes were cooked, we broke away the hard clay shell, tapped open the now stiff skins, piled on butter and salt, and sitting around the fire, ate hot, steaming, delicious potato to our heart’s content. I never questioned how it came about that in Gimli, Manitoba, on an early fall day, there was a garden full of potatoes. I thought when I was a youngster that potatoes might have come with the Ukrainians when they arrived in 1891 or 1892. After all, it was the Ukrainians who were the gardeners, who grew turnips and parsley and onions, who filled perogies (inconceivable food in Iceland) with potato and cheese. But I was wrong. Our potato patch had a more direct lineage. In 1878, only three years after the Large Group arrived, a survey was conducted of people living on Hecla Island. They have built log houses; many had a cow and a calf, a boat; they caught fish. Few people tried to grow grain and, of those who did try, the results ranged from mostly disappointing to disastrous. What wasn’t disastrous was the good old potato. This is critical because the potato crop from a single acre plus the milk from a cow will provide a family with a boring but a nutritious diet. In Nelson Gerrard’s Hecla Island Pioneers and Placenames, a document you can find on line with a Google search, the story of the Icelandic pioneers and the potato is told. At Nýibær in 1878, seven bushels of potatoes are planted and 95 bushels harvested. At Fagriskógur, four bushels are planted and 43 bushels harvested, plus three bushels of vegetables and one-sixth of a bushel of flatbeans. At Grund, four bushels of potatoes sown, 15 bushels harvested. At Kirkjuból, Halldór Thorgilsson has two cows and a calf and 150 “weights” of hay, but amazingly, from nine bushels of planted potatoes, he has harvested 120 bushels. At Furubrekka, Tryggvi Ingimundsson Hjaltalín and Kristín Jonatansdóttir harvested 35 bushels of potatoes and three bushels of root corps. They had a cow, calf, and 20 chickens. Eggs go well with potatoes. At Sandnes, Páll Bjarnason and Sigríður Jónsdóttir harvested 90 bushels of potatoes and five bushels of root crops. They also had a cow, two calves, and 25 chickens. At Birkiland, Friðbjörn Stefánsson and Guðrún Kristjánsdóttir had cleared three acres and broken two, harvesting 100 bushels of potatoes. At Fagurhóll, Hjálmar Hjálmarsson and Jófríður Jósefsdóttir had 2½ acres cleared from solid bush with 1½ acres were under cultivation. Over 110 bushels of potatoes were harvested along with 17 bushels of root crops. With the help of neighbours, they cleared a total of six acres of bush at Fagurhóll. In 1880, they harvested 150 bushels of potatoes. At Egilsstaðir, Egill Guðbrandsson and Salóme Thórhalladóttir had four acres cleared by 1878, two under cultivation. From that they harvested 180 bushels of potatoes and 36 bushels of root crops. At Ingólfsvík, Magnús Hallgrímsson and Sesselja Daníelsdóttir, who had emigrated from Akureyri in 1874, had 4½ acres cleared and 3½ acres under cultivation. Harvest that year included 90 bushels of potatoes, 60 bushels of wheat, 10 bushels of barley, and 10 bushels of root crops. They owned two cows and an ox. On their immigration forms, the Icelanders said they were farmers. They weren’t, of course. They were herders. They did not plough or sow or reap. They did not cut down forests, nor break virgin land. They faced what would seem to most of us insurmountable problems. New Iceland was not suitable for grain farming. It was heavily forested and flooding in the near future would drive people away. Much of the land was covered in rocks from the retreating glaciers. Much of the land was swamp that needed to be drained. In spite of all these problems, by 1878 houses had been built, boats had been built, nets sewn, land cleared and tilled, the first tentative crops planted. The settlers came from various places in Iceland, but contemplating the potato, I wondered if some of the settlers such as Magnús Hallgrímsson and Sesselja Daníelsdóttir, who came from Akureyri with its potato history, brought with them knowledge of planting and harvesting. Of course, by 1873, potato-growing in Iceland had spread so others would have known about potatoes. Richard Burton in his book, Ultima Thule, says the potato is grown all over Iceland. He says it is small but satisfactory. Van Gogh painted a brilliant painting called The Potato Eaters. In it, a poor family is gathered around a table, having a meal of potatoes. That scene was replicated a million times in real life; more than a million times, in Europe. It was repeated on Hecla Island, in New Iceland, in the Icelandic communities beyond the borders of New Iceland. It was a scene that may have represented difficult times but, more, it represented the ability of the Icelandic settlers to adapt, to make the best from what was available. They did not have centuries to change from being herders to being farmers. They had to make that change right now. The potato helped them make that transition. As my father, mother, brother, and I crouched around a fire in our backyard on cool September Sunday afternoons, eating our roasted potatoes, we did not feel poor but wealthy. And if we had smoked goldeye to eat with our potatoes, we envied no rich man his fancy dinner. Author’s note: The Seed Saver’s Exchange has a seed potato available called the Purple Viking. You can order it. Thanks to the potato W.D. Valgardson Victoria, BC IMAGE COURTESY OF WIKIPEDIA - PUBLIC DOMAIN Vincent van Gogh's painting, The Potato Eaters, 1885

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