Has Gleaning Lost Its Glamour?
When you reap your harvest in your field and forget a sheaf in the
field, you shall not go back to get it; it shall be left for the alien,
the orphan, and the widow, so that the LORD your God may bless you in all
your undertakings. Deuteronomy 24:19
Gleaners traditionally were peasants who gathered spare grain or fruit
when farmers had followed biblical advice not to harvest all their crop,
but to leave some for those who needed it most.
No
surprise, then, that Rehoboth, with its biblical name and Methodist
history, promotes gleaning. Actually, they don't call it gleaning. They
call it "bulk trash pick up." But it's the same thing. Everyone
in Rehoboth knows that in early May you can put everything you don't need
anymore out on the curb and the town will haul it away for free. Unless
the gleaners get it first.
Gleaning in Rehoboth used to be quite a scene. Starting late Sunday
afternoon, cars and trucks would cruise the streets, slowing down to look
over the piles of junk. It's amazing what people are interested in. I was
intrigued one year by a couple of tough looking lesbians who trolled
through town picking up every old and rusted air conditioner, stove,
grill, and refrigerator they could find. Once I put out a box of rusty
nails, a couple of old gallons of paint, and a broken beach chair. Gone
within an hour! Sometimes, late at night, I'd be awakened to the sound of
an idling car and door slamming. Late night gleaners.
Now I'm not above gleaning myself. Michael and I like to hop in the
Volvo station wagon and go snooping. Once we picked up a big hydrangea
bush. And we've plucked the occasional chair. One year, we found a couple
of old fashioned, standing, rod iron lamps that we used on the front porch—all
they needed was some paint, some re-wiring, and new lampshades. We
probably could have purchased new ones for about the same price as what we
spent to re-do them, but they wouldn't have had that desirable old beach
cottage look.
One Sunday evening, about 7 years ago, we were sitting on the front
porch watching the gleaners. You know, you almost felt insulted when a
gleaner slowed down to look over your stuff and then took off without
picking something. That's why we always arranged our junk as nice as we
could, to encourage the gleaners. One Sunday evening, a drag queen driving
a yellow Volkswagon Rabbit comes roaring up to the house. The Rabbit was
completely crammed full of stuff and she'd even strapped an old table to
the roof. But somehow she'd spotted a treasure in our pile of junk and
beelined for an old tennis racket. It wasn't even a classic old wooden
one, but an old green metal Yonex. After gracefully practicing a few
backhand strokes in the middle of the street, the next thing I know,
"Gigi Platinumski" is up on the porch sipping our wine and
nibbling some crabcakes.
That kind of stuff doesn't happen anymore. Maybe because the junk isn't
as good as it used to be?
I remember when you'd drive around and see lots of rattan and wicker
chairs that just needed some glue and some paint. Or some wooden windows
and shutters, bookcases, old metal lawn chairs (that are quite trendy
now), and push power lawnmowers. Classic old beach house junk. I swear,
the gleaning back then had a Ralph Lauren aura about it.
Eight, nine, ten years ago, when alot of old houses were changing
hands, they were sold furnished. The new owners didn't want all the old
stuff, so they put some of it out on the street. The difference today, I
think, is that when the older houses change hands, they're usually cleared
out and bulldozed.
So, now, we often glean by snooping (trespassing?) through the houses
slated to be knocked down. We went into one old cottage recently and all
that was left were old medicine bottles and stacks of interesting old
books. We "rescued" a few, including Isadora Duncan, Anna and
the King of Siam, The Stan Musial Story, The Egg and I (life on a
wilderness chicken ranch), and The Last Great Resorts, a wonderful account
of the history of America's most popular summer resorts, written in 1945.
However, we did hop into the Volvo today and drive around, just to see
what was out. Lots of old mattresses and pillows. A toilet. Some dusty
bamboo window shades. Tree and shrub cuttings. Rusted propane tanks. Piles
of leaves. I definitely feel I can declare that gleaning in Rehoboth has
lost its glamour.
Rich Barnett is an unabashed gay, liberal, tree-hugging,
whiskey-drinking, Rehoboth cottage-owning story-teller. He's working on a
book and can be reached at