The Harvest Season!

  • Lee_EONNext's Avatar
    Community Team
    Does anyone remember the Harvest Festival at school? Showing my age here or do they still do this?

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  • Tommysgirl's Avatar
    Level 53
    @Lee_EONNext

    I remember the Harvest Festivals at my primary school. We all took fruit and vegetables into the school assembly, and sang harvest hymns including 'We plough the fields and scatter' A local baker used to make large quite flat loaves in the shape of a wheatsheaf. After the festival they used to take all the stuff to the church hall and the Womens Royal Voluntary Service ladies used to distribute it amongst the elderly people in the village.

    I don't know if all schools still have them, but my great-nephews primary school still does.

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  • retrotecchie's Avatar
    Level 92
    @Tommysgirl

    The WRVS is no more, I think. Modern times and all that. In town just the other day I saw a bloke and a lass both wearing hi-vis jackets that just said Royal Volunteer Service, so I'm thinking the chaps and the chapesses have now just merged into one single organisation.

    Our village school still has their Harvest Festival in the local church just down the lane from me. The kids (all twelve of them) form a 'crocodile' with a teacher at each end and walk past my hovel bearing assorted produce and goodies. They always walk back empty handed so the procession is a little quicker on the way back to school again. The offerings are donated to a local food bank 👍

    Last one this year though as the school is closing at Christmas. Then the village officially dies...no shop, no pub, no bus service, no telephone box and finally no school. I'm staying on as the token 'sais' but we'll be downgraded to a hamlet so I won't be able to say 'I'm the only sais in the village' for much longer 🤣🤣
    Don't shoot me, I'm only the piano player. I DON'T work for or on behalf of EON.Next, but am willing to try and help if I can. Not on mains gas, mobile network or mains drainage. House heated almost entirely by baby dragons.
  • Tommysgirl's Avatar
    Level 53
    @retrotecchie

    You'll be right about the Royal Volunteer Service, the chaps and chapesses two separate organisations will have merged into one.

    It's sad when villages lose their school, bus service, pub and shop. It's happened to quite a few small Northumberland villages, but I didn't realise they lose 'village' status and become hamlets.

    'Sais: if I'm right, that means English person. 😂😂
  • retrotecchie's Avatar
    Level 92
    @Tommysgirl

    There is just a shade more nuance to it. Sais means English person, yes, but it's more complicated than that.

    For instance, there was a 'do' at the village hall a few years ago. When I first moved to the village, I made an effort to get to know the neighbours, meet the natives and learn a few pleasantries in the local dialect (North Wales has a version of Welsh that is rather different to South Wales and we use a third dialect which neither can understand properly 🤣). A lot of 'incomers' round here make no attempt to integrate so naturally there can be a little 'friction'.

    One such person turned up at the event and was actually rather obnoxious and a bit offensive. I was sat with a couple of Welsh friends and one of them made the comment "There are two kinds of English round here....'sais' and '🤬 sais' ". Rather worried, I asked which category I fell into.

    Hywel, who is a six foot three rather burly ex-Rugby player passed me a can of beer, put his arm round my shoulder and said to me "You're a 'sais'....but you're our 🤬 sais".

  • Tommysgirl's Avatar
    Level 53
    @retrotecchie

    'You're a sais...but your our 🤬 sais 'That's great. 😂😃.