HMB Heart & Soul: Shorty Berta: Man of the Earth

Note: In 1977 “Transitions: Montara to Pescadero An Oral History” was edited by Aida Hinjosa and published by Canada College.

Shorty Berta: Man of the Earth

By Michael Silver

(Image of Mr. Shorty Berta by photographer Pat Bolfing.)

“…while Berta works his farm in vegetables and

salt air as he’s done each spring for fifty seasons,

last of the old time truck farmers

Last of the good green growers,

looking like a dream in his field—

a farmer, a man of the earth,

a seed planting seeds….

from ‘Evening Drive’ by Ron Federighi

You can usually see him working around his truck farm when you drive on Highway 92 into Half Moon Bay. Sometimes he is working in the stand selling the vegetables he has grown. Most often, he is in the fields. Occasionally, you can see him atop the tractor he calls ‘capterpillar.’ He still works very hard aside from the fact that he believes he has become lazy, waking up at 7 a.m. to start his day. He is usually dressed the same: work pants, flannel shirt, suspenders and rubber boots with lots of dirt from hard work thrown in. All these facts seem unimportant unless you know that Guiseppe is eighty-seven-years-old.

No one knows him as Giuseppe. He is Shorty to his many friends. His face is wrinkled and his hair sparse, but his eyes have the glow of eternal youth. He has a sly sense of humor and his keen wit was ever-present as he related to us the experiences of his life.

As we entered the Berta’s small, spotless home, Shorty was seated at the table shuffling a deck of cards. He asked us if we would like to play with him and how much money we had to lose. We agreed to play at a later date. He moved into the small, comfortable living room and sat back in his recliner.

We were nervous on this, our first interview, but once he began talking, things naturally fell into place. He spoke mostly of past days with his sly sense of humor and no remorse.

“I been in California since nineteen fo’teen. I came to dis country, I was twenty fo’ years old.

“I was a farmer back dere in in Italia too. My father was a farmer too. And when I came hea’ I thought I could make mo’ money to go aroun’ work in a mine, logging camp, stuff like dat. I try try six yea’. I go aroun’ work fo’ years in de mine.

“Den I go, ah, in a farm. I peek grape by de ton, we go make mo’ money. But den afta six yea’ was still broke. I say, ‘My God, I’m gonna buy a farm’

“I went over der to Moss Beach. I buy stock ova der in a truck farm. I work fo’ yea’ ova der. Den we’re gonna make good, an’ de boss, he steal all. He keep all fo’ himself. I stay der from nineteen twenny to nineteen twenny to nineteen twenny fo’. Den I start a argument. I sell out. I say, ‘I need a rest. I’m gonna be de boss, an’ nobody’s ticket.’ Den, I rent dis place, for twenny five yea. Den in nineteen fo-ty eight, I got married. Den I buy fo’teen acre.”

Shorty’s conversation included much talk of the old days and what it was like working on a ranch during his first few years in this country.

“At dat time you work in a ranch, a dolla’-a-day. Dey pay your room an’ board, but dey put you to sleep in de, ah, stable, in a bunkhouse. My doggie has better place now den I had back den. We hadda work an’ go to de bathroom outside. We had no electric. Dey give you a lamp, Dey give you a lamp, you put in light fuel, but I like it.

“First place I work was in Stro’berry Lake. I work der’ fo’ two an’ a half days. We work pretty hard, but when I go eat, son of a gun! Der was a steak dat long. (He indicates two feet with his hands.) I thought it was a sin to get mo’, maybe dey come afta’ me, der be none in the mo’ning. I hadda friend of mine, he was in dis country about a yea’, an’ he says, ‘Sit down, get it off.’ (He whispers animatedly.) An’ when we eat dat steak, de guy, de cook, he still bring mo’. An’ in de’ mo’ning, he bring de ham an’ eggs, you know. Big piece of ham, an’ he put it on a big table we had, an’ some people, dey take half a dozen eggs. Dey eat like der was no end, an’ den when det was no mo’, he go an’ fill the plate up.

“But sleep, sleep was bad. For sleep, we had de bunkhouse. You know, one guy, he sleeps here and the other guy, he sleep above, three full. But we had jus’a two-inch board. No mattress, no nothing. We just had one blanket, yeah, an’ dose boards were jus’ like dey come from de mill. We got chinks (splinters). Yeah! I don’ care to sleep dat way.

“You have no cold ’cause dey have big stove, you know, an’ all kinds of wood, an’ we put wood in der too. But in November it started to rain, an’ den we had to quit. But it was all right for eat. Boy, it was all right.”

We kidded Shorty about his interest in food and his desire for life’s little luxuries.

“I like now betta. When I come hea’ we have no inside bathroom. Shower–for shower you had to take outside. I like now.

“When I come to dis country, I like right away. When I land in New Yo’k to San Francisco. It take seven day at dat time, but, ah, in Italy I put in two yea’ service in de army an’ was on de train every day. But in dat train, de seat was a two by fo’, you know,. When I land in New Yo’k, I take de train to San Francisco, the seat was like a centipede. The night car man, he had a big pile of–what you call? Pillows, nice an’ clean. An, he give you, everybody a pillow an’ you sleep betta’ den baby. I like. Den I fin’ de steak mo’ big. Back in Italy, was a steak about dat big and dat long. (He indicates about two inches in thickness and three inches in length.) But ova’ hea’, Jeesus Christ! De steak was like dis! (He indicates two feet in length.) Dey got a pretty good size steak. You be su’prised.”

We asked Shorty if he liked life today better than when he was younger.

“I liked some t’ings betta’ in my day. But, ah, de other t’ings mo’bett’ now. De money, befo’ you make a dolla-a-day. But, den today people have mo’ of de money and dey got mo’ money to spend.

“I remember when I was young. I was by myself at de time. I would go to San Francisco. Den, I go down with twenny dolla’. I stay three, fo’ day, eat an’ sleep, go to dance, an’ take some money home, too.

“Now,  I go into the city, me an’ my wife, with twenny dolla’. We go eat, der just enough for one meal.

“When I come to dis country, I have an Italian suit. I was flat broke. I din’ have two cents in my pocket. Den one day, when I make thirty dolla’, I buy myself a new suit, shoes, an’ a shirt for thirty dolla’. Now fo’ the thirty dolla’, you couldn’t buy nothing. Just las’ yea’ I wen’ down an’ bought a coat. Jus’ a big coat, an’ it cos’ me eighty dolla’.

“One t’ing I don’ like. Da people befo’ dey was mo’ friendly. Like mo’ one another. Yeah, mo’ like a family. Da people den was mo’ friendly. Like in a ranch. You have New Year an’ Easta’ Sunday, an stuff like dat, an’ we come togetha’ an’ eat, an’ den we stay all day togetha’. We hadda guy, he hadda accordion an’ we had music, an’ we dance all day. We sing. We drink wine.

“Now you got the family hea’, you just come eat. Now, five minutes afta’ you eat, you get in da machine [car[ an’ pretty soon you get de telephone call from Santa Claus. ‘Hello, I hit de telephone pole, goodbye!'”

By this time, in the course of the interview, we found that Shorty was answering most of our questions. His favorite topic was to talk of some time gone by that he called “my day.”

“Befo’, in my day, women, dey was scarce. You go to a dance today, an’ a nice girl like this [he points to one of the students], nice looking, she have, ah, fifty nice young fella around her. I put you girls wise. Don’t you go set yo’ mind to marrying a farmer because he is too full of mud every time you see him over de house. If you come in tomorrow, I go in, get room all full of mad.

“You go to a dance today, an’ der more girl den boy. In my day, ifa dey know I have a daughter like her [he points to one of the students], they come from Pescadero, dey come from all over. I work in a mine up in Shasta County; we were about five hundred people. No old fella, no olda’ den thirty-five yea’ old. Dey was Italian, Austrian, Sweded, a German. No lady at all, but eh, de post office, he hadda wife, an’ ah sometimes we work two day shift, day an’ night. The night shift, when it got through work, he go ova der in de yard. Dey have big yard, an’ dat lady, she come an’ give da meal. You shoulda seen dat lady!

“You make me laugh. I tell you the truth if you wanna know because she had a baby. A baby like dis [he gestures[ an’ his father he was Italian, from Silicia, from South Italia. An’ he, I remember, he kiss dat kid. He says: ‘Oh you nice kid, but your momma got you beat!’

“Like I say, der were no lady, but dey have dance at saloon, an’ dis guy [saloon keeper] pay married lady to dance with men. Ah, he go on ranch, yeah. Dey was all married, dose ladies. He pay two dolla’ to de wife. Husband, he go, too. He got to eat for nothing, an’ drink fo’ nothing, an’ de wives they got two dolla’s. Nineteen twenty fo’, I would go to Moss Beach, an’ der was another fella’, an’ he hadda saloon, but de ladies would come, too. A lotta farmers aroun’ here, they had a wife, an’ the husband would go start drinking ova’ der an’ if de wives came, too, he got a free whiskey.

“Dey had anotha’ saloon in Miramar. Columbo Hotel. An Italian fella. I think he die not too long ago. But we was mo’ people den. Every ranch nowadays, dey got dose caterpillars. Dey do a lotta work. But befo, every ranch, dey had twenty-five, thirty men, cause dey do everyt’ing by hand, you know.”

Shortly told us about his marriage and jokingly why he had no children of his own. He is self-conscious of his height but speaks of it with humor.

“In nineteen twenty-nine, you know, den we strike ten year depression ova’ hea’. We don’ make ten cents. About nineteen thirty, den I was too old, I couldn’t get no mo’ spring chicken. So friend o’ mine from San Mateo, he’s a two yea’ older den me. He go back to Italia. He come back an’ he old me he got married, an’ he say, ‘I marry a widow.An I say, are der any more? An he say Jesus Christ, by de’ million!’ So I go down an’ get my passport.”

In 1948 Shortly and Mrs. Berta, a widow from a town near Lucca, with two small daughters from her previous marriage, wre married, and she came to Half Moon Bay with him.

“I had a friend of mine, Italian, of six feet tall. He got married ‘an he come see me. He had ranch in Half Moon Bay, den he move to Stockon. He come see me. I fix him up ova’ da’ stand, introduce to my wife, see? An’ I say, ‘Look, whad you want? An’ I’m gonna give you thouan’ dolla’ to make baby fo’ me. You so tall! He say, Oh, I coulda make him fo’ nothing.’

“But I tell you, I think nowadays da children dey get too smart. In my day, you know ah, a kid when he was eighteen, twenny yea’ old.

(more coming)