IT HAPPENED Chapter 7.
By "REGGIE"
It was the occasion of the Annual Sports. The weather had been particularly unkind of late and can best be described as follows :
It rained and rained and rained and rained,
The average was well maintained,
And then, most curious thing of ail,
A gentle rain began to fall.
Next day, 'twas fairly dry,
Save for a deluge from the sky,
Which wetted people to the skin,
And after that the rain set in.
Folks wondered what they next would get,
Indeed they got a lot of wet.
But there will be a change again,
And we shall have a drop of rain.
Now, the mountain was the usual grandstand for the lads, as none of us had pocket money that would stretch to the 1/- admission. The grass was too wet to sit on so we hit on the idea of viewing the events from a large oak. " Why not build a big nest on that very big bough ? " said somebody. Yes, that would be splendid ! So we marshalled our labour and the least nimble climbers were sent off to gather fallen branches and large twigs ; also, ferns were to be uprooted and gathered into a pile at the base of this sturdy tree. Then the best climbers formed a chain, each handing up material to the lads in the upper branches. We were human crows building a gigantic crows nest. The shape of one mighty bough invited the making of a nest, as it was saucer-shaped. And so the busy workers got going lining the bough, first with large branches, then smaller branches, twigs and finally ferns—fresh green ones to give a soft seat. What energy was expended in those willing hands that made the work light! To think we had such a comfortable grand stand free of cost! The smell of bracken, the feeling of being nestled high over the shorter oaks, looking down on a sea of trees flanking the mountain-side. It resembled the rough houses of the natives in the teak forests—built on trees.
I beckoned to the next boy to join me in my ecstasy, and he, too, thought it was well worth the trouble. By this time the third lad had reached us, and the fourth. He too expressed the same opinion, then, CRACK ! ! I can almost hear that ' crack ' to-day. We swayed rapidly downwards. I had a feeling of lower branches suddenly brushing my face, then all went black. For how long the four of us lay on the wet grass, thirty-five feet below the nest, I know not. Some other boys had heard that ' crack ' a furlong away and had come running to see what was up (or what was down). When I came to, I imagined that I had been lying there for days. All sense of time was lost. I turned to see where my companions lay, and if they were intact, I had only seen chaps looking like that in the films. " Any bones gone ! " I shouted. Two responded about their bruises, a double lip and an egg on the skull, but number three was speechless, motionless. I remembered reading somewhere about the eyeball test, and having examined his eyes, I decided to get him carried home. As a short-cut, I crossed the railway lines and informed his sister. He took three days to recover consciousness.
As I said before, we lads loved the Welsh hills, these bracken-sided, wind-swept-topped hills. In the August holidays many happy days were spent on them. We made our own tents. They were made thus : a scooped out place was found or made, then stones and clods were gathered to make a wall. After that dead branches were laid across the wall, and then ferns piled on top till all was dark inside. Some of the more enterprising had an inner chamber for sleeping.
Having left home before the summer sun was too hot, we plodded to the chosen spot -usually by a stream - where we could drink and splash about. Enough sandwiches were taken to last the day, and we had a most enjoyable time, as good as the modern holiday camp, living on the nuts, berries and other good things the mountain naturally provided. The woody odour of the copse, the bleating of mountain sheep and the lapping of the streamlet added to our bliss. It was on the top of one of these mountains which I loved that I found adventure which ended up in a newspaper report.
The autumn morning had started gloriously. Streaks of red admixed with others of blue and amber on the southern sky as the sun mastered the heavens. It was too good a morning to stay indoors. I quickly decided on a walk across the mountain-top. My route came abruptly lo a halt at one point as there was a gaping crevice a few steps ahead. The working of the coal seams far be!ow had disturbed the stratum of the hills, causing a rip in the rocks. I lay down and crept to the edge, and there, a black abyss about three yards wide, seeming to be bottomless. I dropped a stone and the crashing and rumbling could be heard for half a minute. It must be very deep. I threw another and out of the blackness a face looked up at me. I was so scared I nearly fell over the edge. Then I could see it was the visage of a white-faced horse. It had fallen over during the night and came to rest on a ledge sixty feet down the crevice. When I had thrown down some hanks of grass for him to nibble in case he had been there several days I went down to the nearest village to break the news. It was afternoon before the police, the R.S.P.C.A. and the local council got to work with a crane and raised the poor animal out of his misery. Apart from scratches he was remarkably fit. The local news agencv was present and the report was in time to appear that evening.
February 1957