I really don't know. Do you think they start to teach their children such stuff already with 5 or 6?
One of the reasons they live in such extended family groups is that a farm is a group effort. The kids are doing chores as soon as they can walk and comprehend simple commands. For a kid who is too small to help with the really heavy or skilled labor, driving the wagon somewhere for some supplies really quick might actually be a task he is assigned once in a while. And when the grown-ups are getting ready and loading heavy stuff into a wagon, sending the little kid underneath to check for damage might be a feasible idea. Even aside from such situations, farming is a constant job that takes every bit of a farmer's attention he can give it. Any peripheral tasks that can be dumped on the kids, are so dumped.
A tiny mistake?
28/11/2009 08:48:37 AM
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Re: A tiny mistake?
28/11/2009 08:55:12 AM
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Nah, not too young to teach the basics. On a farm, they'd learn even earlier I'd think. *NM*
28/11/2009 09:09:05 AM
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Yeah?
28/11/2009 09:22:52 AM
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On a farm? With absolutely no machinery? Are you kidding?
28/11/2009 11:15:42 AM
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Ah, ok. One never ceases to learn! *NM*
28/11/2009 11:25:59 AM
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Definitely 110% for sure and probably younger than that. (I live in Nebraska).
28/11/2009 05:42:40 PM
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I learned to drive the truck when feeding cattle at 5 or 6. Farm kids learn stuff. *NM*
29/11/2009 02:53:31 AM
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Re: A tiny mistake?
28/11/2009 08:18:20 PM
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And the rest of the book supports an argument that proper wording is not B-Sand's strong suit.
29/11/2009 02:35:53 PM
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Considering that Perrin is a moron, I would be very surprised if that were the case. *NM*
29/11/2009 05:28:09 AM
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