Ours
was a very big village pond; almost a lake. In the middle part it was pretty
deep as well. We spent a considerable part of our growing up years both by its
side as well as inside it. During the summers, we would compete with the
buffaloes in swimming in the green, mossy waters. We sunbathed on the back of
relaxing buffalos; dived then from the platform; played Catch Me If You Can, a sort
of hydraulic version of hide and seek, as it involved a lot of dives to slip
away from the catcher. We also tried speedboat and water-skating. Unruly
buffaloes were chosen for this version of enjoyment. One hand held the buffalo’s
tail and the other yielded a short but sturdy stick, preferably mulberry wood.
The stick-yielding hand would go in quick-fire mode. The buffalo would go
searing away like a speedboat dragging the driver in her wake. It was done on
dual purpose: one, to enjoy the fast water ride; two, to teach the disobedient
buffalo a lesson because it usually broke all rules of civility and would run
away into the nearby fields.
During
the winter, we gossiped sitting on our haunches by the shore when the buffaloes
had their fun bath. It was never easy to get them out of the water. They would
close their eyes, slowly chewing the cud. Then we would start trying our arms
for long-distance throws. Stones, pebbles, clods or any throwable object would
start a meteoric shower. They even displayed their disagreement. As the stones
fell near them with a plop, they moved their necks in a naysaying manner. We
developed good throwing arms due to this practice. It helped us a lot in our
other engagement, village cricket. The balls on dusty potholed uneven pitches
missed the bat usually. But we threw it around a lot. So, much of the time was
spent in searching it among the bunchgrass and acacia shrubs.
Well,
one particular throw of mine was too good as it hit the sleeping buffalo on its
horns. It took offense and went scudding across the pond and ran away towards a
neighboring village. It took a few hours to cajole her back. Another throw was
also good for the opposite team as it missed the bricks, serving as wickets,
but bad for the old farmer who was passing near the boundary. It hit him on the
back on first bounce. He used to be an angry man. He picked up the ball and ran
after us, aiming to hit any of the backs. We ran away. He left with the heavy
cork ball. We knew he would seek revenge. We shifted to a still more uneven
part of the land at the other end of the village. Those were forgiving times.
We were back to our former ground after two weeks.