Did You Know?
excerpt from the Soil Report Newsletter of Soilmoisture
Equipment Corp.
You've heard the expression,
"I cleaned up," meaning the person made a killing at the track
or wherever, obtaining lots of money, maybe all there was to get. You've
also heard the opposite expression, "I was taken to the cleaners,"
meaning a person lost everything.
Both expressions have nothing to do with dry
cleaning, laundering, or custodial services. They have everything to
do with agriculture, especially harvesting. The word has been lost in
the modern era of combines and such, but for centuries to "clean"
meant to harvest thoroughly, leaving nothing for anyone else, even the
birds. In the days of scythes, sickles and such, fields were poorly
harvested, allowing the less fortunate to come in and scoop up some
of the crop for their own use. A person who "cleaned" his
field, took everything, was considered uncharitable. Today it's simply
good farming.