
09/04/04, 02:27 PM
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Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 7,154
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True, if the wheat or corn is left in the shock to long, the grain will feed herds of mice and rats. The Amish north of here still cut wheat with a grain binder which ties it in sheaves and the opperater drops the sheaves in rows on the ground. It is then stood up in shocks to dry until they haul it in and run it through a threshing machine that seperates the wheat from the straw. Corn is done the same way, only using a corn binder then shocking it to dry out. Later it is hauled in on horse drawn wagons and run through a corn shredder which shucks the ears from the fodder and conveys them into a wagon. The fodder is shreddes into small pieces and blown into the haymow of the barn for livestock feed.
I never seen anyone plant a group of various plants in the same plot for harvest. They quit bundling the grain into sheaves by hand over 100 years ago. It looks like Unk gave you boys a trip to the past.
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