FOOTNOTE:
[1] Boy Farmers, p. 176.
A group of island boys move from seasonal, self-directed labor into apprenticeships and paid work, learning trades such as smithing and shipbuilding while confronting practical dangers, storms, and workplace mishaps. Their experiences include reef gunning, voyages to a nearby city that broaden their ideas, and efforts at local improvements. Through competition, responsibility, setbacks, and acts of service and prayer they develop mechanical skill, independence, and moral resolve. Episodes trace learning, community ties, small triumphs and failures, and the transition from boyhood tasks to steady employment, culminating in durable achievement and greater social standing.
[1] Boy Farmers, p. 176.