CharlyBonifaz

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  • in reply to: forehead yoke #47165

    I can’t understand how they carry the pole.

    come to thinking…… are you talking of one-axle-carts?
    I don’t think you can move those with a pair of oxen side by side and this equipment
    http://www.ro-klinger.de/Mondorf/images4/rhabatrans.jpg
    this is how it was done….(thanks to eifelkorbmacher, who pointed this picture out to me to begin with)
    elke

    in reply to: forehead yoke #47164

    been working with my ox this way (forehead yoke) before we started pulling with different kinds of harnesses (the latter requiring some muscle development to fit properly); with the forehead yoke he will still pull, when he does no more with f.e. a withers yoke; the animal has to figure out his own way of maximum power transfer, especially in the beginning mine tried a lot of diffrent neck/head positions until he found his comfortable optimum; there are different sizes of forehead yokes but they barely need fitting….
    positives:
    absolutely easy to work with, nothing you can do wrong
    will not chafe, as it “falls into place”
    have not managed to break one yet
    easy to maintain, little storage space needed
    negatives:
    no way for the animal to keep flies away (so add an additional item: leather-strings that hang down over the face)
    definitely needs horns to be fixed to

    any ideas how to make it, or who could make it?

    mine has a wooden bow between the iron bar and the leather pad; there are some made of only iron and leather, which is what I would be looking into if I had to organize them nowadays (only a smith and a saddler) – but be sure to show the saddler what you want, otherwise you end up, with straps put on the wrong way :rolleyes: ; I also have old forehead yokes that have a flat piece of metal between the pad and the iron bar that works like a spring and adds “cushion” when beginning to pull a load

    being of leather, how do you maintain it?

    wipe it off after use; clean it with saddle soap every once in a while and oil it (including wood and iron)

    I can’t understand how they carry the pole.

    hmmm, I was taught, the pole is not to carry but to steer…….; the chain runs from the pole to a simple leather collar that goes around the neck

    how do they hold that cart back going downhill or backing up

    with a back harness/britchen, anything that runs all around the animal and hooks to the chain that comes from the pole; plus: brakes on the carts

    hope this answers some of the questions
    elke

    in reply to: importance of bovines in peak oil #47500

    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=148929

    the way “back” to animal power can be seen in lots of different places; the quickest changes come in the agricultural areas that have only recently turned to modern equipment; they are the first to return to the old ways, being easy for them still knowing the routines …….

    true, horses and mules are more powerful and faster,

    I doubt the “powerful”:rolleyes:, but what cattle has going for them: much easier to feed, much cheaper to keep, triple purpose and use, easier to train, so much smarter 🙂 ………

    hardly anybody considers: oil is not only eminent in transports; just look around you: how much oil in plastics, paints, garments……

Viewing 3 posts - 511 through 513 (of 513 total)