Copyright Oggbashan November 2019
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
Most of the conversations are assumed to be in Spanish but retold in English.
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On a warm June Sunday evening about ten pm I was sitting outside our town's independent coffee shop sipping a cooling cup of coffee when the evening coach from London arrived. It stopped here on the way to a major coastal town. Usually only one or two locals got off, returning from a rare shopping trip to Oxford Street.
I was very tired, hoping the coffee would keep me awake to make my evening meal. My father and I had been picking and packing apples on his farm since dawn and we were failing to deal with the early cropping varieties. We didn't normally work on a Sunday but had been unable to recruit any seasonal workers this year. We were missing my mother who had died of breast cancer three years ago. The two of us were not really enough to run our farm even though we were working seven days a week from dawn to dusk and often beyond. We had no life beyond the farm.
A group of eight young women got off the coach, all carrying heavy back packs. As the coach drove away, they looked lost, unsure where to go. I left my coffee and walked across to them.
"Can I help?" I asked.
I was assailed by a torrent of Spanish from almost all of them.
I held up my hand and said in Spanish:
"Please, one at a time, and slowly."
I pointed at one woman who seemed to be trying to get the others to shut up.
"Please, can you tell me how I can help?"
She introduced herself as Dolores. She and her friends had come to England from a small Spanish village inland in Southern Spain with the promise of well-paid farm work. They had taken a coach to Madrid, another one to Paris and finally one to Victoria Coach Station in London. There they were supposed to be met by an agent who would direct them to the farm where they would work. When they arrived at London he had not been there and was not answering the mobile number they had been given.
One of them had done a search on his name to find if there was any other way of contacting him and had found that he had been arrested yesterday charged with running a scam to recruit Spanish women to work in brothels. Their village and surrounding area had high unemployment for younger people. They had been surprised that the Spanish agent who had visited the village had only selected the eight women after interview and none of the men who had applied had been chosen. Now they knew why.
But having arrived in London to find work that didn't exist they were nearly out of money. Dolores who spoke some English, unlike the others, had asked where there might be a need for farm workers. A Polish man suggested this town, where he had worked before. They had just enough money for the coach fare to here, and now they were stranded, broke and hungry. Did I know any farmers nearby who needed farm workers and had accommodation for them?
I laughed, which annoyed Dolores.
"Me," I said.
"You?"
"Yes. Me. My father and I have hectares of apples that need picking and packing now. We used to use Polish workers but now they have found work in Poland. You eight won't be enough but you could do much more than my father and I could do alone. We can provide accommodation and pay you ten pounds an hour if you become skilled enough, and eight pounds until you have proved yourselves. What do you think?"
The eight of them went into a huddle to discuss my offer. It didn't take them long because I had spoken in Spanish which they had all heard.
"We agree," Dolores said. "But we are tired and hungry now."
"OK," I said. I pointed at the local MacDonald's which the townspeople had tried to stop opening.
"If we go there I will buy you all a meal. While you are eating I will fetch the farm bus and take you to the accommodation. It is only ten minutes' walk from here but I can take you and your packs there in a minute of two."
They were able to use the touch screen to order. I paid for all eight meals with my debit card. The total wasn't much. Dolores asked whether the cost of the meals would be deducted from their pay. I said not because recruiting staff had a cost, and eight meals were much lower than I would normally pay.
I cycled back to the farmhouse, told my father who would get the mobile homes ready, and drove the farm's minibus back to MacDonald's. The eight women were still eating. When they had finished I drove them the half mile to the farm where my father was waiting. We formally introduced ourselves as my father George Owen and me, Tom Owen, his son.
The two of us showed them the mobile homes which they would use with two women in each. My father had switched on the electricity and Wi-Fi. The gas bottles were already full. I gave each of them a postcard showing the farm's full address, telephone, email and Wi-Fi name and password. I asked Dolores to assign a couple of women to go with me to the local supermarket to buy food and milk for breakfasts. I would pay.
Again she was worried that I was paying out before they had done any work. She was afraid of running up a debt before they started earning. I reassured her. The items for breakfast would be at no cost to them. Again the cost was not excessive.
Back at the farm I told them to be in the packing shed, about fifty yards from their mobile homes at eight next morning for an introduction and training before starting work.
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At five minutes before eight all of them were present and dressed for work in jeans and sweaters. It took about half an hour to issue each of them with formal contracts and then my father and I showed then which apple trees to pick from and how to pack them in crates. I walked around for the first half an hour and was very impressed with their speed and accuracy. At twelve noon I told them to stop. My father and I had been driving the tractor and fork lift truck loading a trailer with crates of picked and packaged apples. Both he and I were astonished at the amount they had done in just over three hours.
I took then to the local supermarket's café and bought them lunch at my expense. At two o'clock they started work again and worked until six when I told them to stop. My father had already driven one trailer load to the wholesalers and another one was full and ready to go. The eight of them had done more in one short day than my father and I could have achieved in a week.
I assembled them in the packing shed and told them that my father and I were very pleased with their work rate today. We had decided that they deserved to be paid at the full qualified rate of ten pounds an hour for the whole eight hour day. They were startled and Dolores objected that the first hour when we were sorting out the contracts and showing what should be done shouldn't be at the full rate but my father and I insisted and paid them in cash. I hadn't told them but it was in the contracts that the hourly rate was after deductions.
When I gave Dolores her day's earnings she burst into tears. It was some minutes before she composed herself to explain.
"When we got off the coach last night, Tom, we were broke, tired and hungry. We had nowhere to go and no money. Between us we had less than five pounds of English money and no Euros. You have fed us, given us somewhere to live and work, and now paid us. Even in one day we have earned enough money to pay our fares back home. Yet you want us to stay and pick apples for longer -- a week? In that time we would have earned more than we had expected in a month."
"A week? No, Dolores. We have started on the early cropping apples. You have at least two weeks' work to finish them and then the other varieties of apples will be ripe. We need you for at least four months."
"Four months? At eighty pounds a day? We would be rich."
"And there is more work than the eight of you can do. We usually have twenty or more seasonal workers but the Poles aren't coming this year. And one other thing. How much was your coach fare from your village to here?"
"Fifty Euros, Tom. It took us a lot to find that much spare money. Some of us had to borrow from our families."
"When we recruit from Poland, we pay the workers their travel expenses, both ways."
I looked at my father who nodded.
"So we will pay you fifty pounds for coming here and another fifty pounds when you finally leave. OK?"
Dolores burst into tears again as I added fifty pounds to the eighty each of them already had.
Another woman, Maria, asked:
"You want more workers?"
"Yes, Maria," I replied, "at least twelve more."
"So if we asked our friends, and our boyfriends, you might pay for them to come here?"
"If they are prepared to work as hard as you eight? Yes."
"We are all used to harvesting olives, Tom, but the pay is not good and is piecework. This year the olive harvest is very poor so picking is difficult. Even the best of us could barely make a Euro an hour picking olives. But there are far more young people wanting to pick olives than the farmers need. Apples are much easier and for us, the pay is fantastic."
"OK. I suggest you contact your friends in Spain and ask them to send their CVs, which can be in Spanish because my father and I can read Spanish, and we will see how many we can use. If suitable, I will send an email acceptance on Sunday and book them to travel on next Wednesday when it is cheaper and less crowded next week. If there are more than twelve we will ask you for your recommendations."
"Us?" Maria queried.
"Of course. You know them. We don't."
"I suppose you speak Polish too?" Dolores asked.
"Of course. We have been employing people from Poland for years."
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