Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

WOMEN IN THE FIELDS.

LAND WORK IN FRANCE. Everyone was struck during the war by the way in which Frenchwomen kept the fields and farms going single handed. In point of fact, as many Frenchwomen are probably working to-day on the land, but they are less conspicuous since they are working together with the men. All along the war front it is a striking spectacle to see the women helping to cut the corn, removing stones, hoeing, digging potatoes even, or, in the more devastated parts clearing the ground and restoring it to its normal condition. On the small farms whole families are working together, and there are quite as many women as men. In Champagne the vineyards are worked to a very great extent by the women of the family and those women who have no ties of their own hire themselves out to do agricultural work just as a man would. At present in view of the shortage of labour in France and the abundant harvest, families are being invited from the towns to help on the land. The invitation has not met with any very great response and conditions of work for the peasant women are for the moment inhumanely hard. Besides cooking and keeping the house going—without be it understood any of the modern conveniences to help them—they work in the fields and gardens and vineyards all the rest of their time. They get up before it is light and they work until it is too dark to see s,o that for two or three months their amount of sleep is reduced to a minimum. Agricultural work is, for the most part, particularly hard in France, since so much of it is done upon old-fashioned lines. Side by side with model., machinery imported from America, there is corn being cut and bound by hand, and while the men for the most part d,o the actual cutting, it is not necessarily confined to them. Sundays do not count either during the busy season. This year a good deal of the corn even while it is of exceedingly good quality, has been beaten down by the weather and this again necessitates a greater amount of labour. Both men and women—to say nothing of the children —are pressed into the service, and while the French woman is amazingly strong, the hard work ages her, until at 40, she often looks like an old woman.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAIPO19231110.2.6

Bibliographic details

Waipa Post, Volume XXIV, Issue 1425, 10 November 1923, Page 2

Word Count
405

WOMEN IN THE FIELDS. Waipa Post, Volume XXIV, Issue 1425, 10 November 1923, Page 2

WOMEN IN THE FIELDS. Waipa Post, Volume XXIV, Issue 1425, 10 November 1923, Page 2