The hay sled
The hay sled was a great Lakeland implement. Where flat ground is rare,
it was essential to have a method of transporting hay or bracken that
would not tip over sideways on steep slopes.
A cart has too high a centre of gravity, but a sled
can be loaded higher than a cart and is always stable. And it can be
hitched backwards or forwards - it doesn't have to be turned round!
The sled at Dalemain is about 6 feet wide by 9 feet long.
Children and women often
helped to lead a horse home with one loaded
sled while the men gathered up and loaded
the next.
Cumbrian farm workers still talk of "leading"
hay when they are moving it from field to
barn.
Hay sleds were also used to bring home bracken
for bedding when straw was not available.
This also weakened the bracken, which is
a strong-growing fern, and helped to increase
the grazing area
on the fell.
David Trotter: "We
used to go for brackens for bedding- you
couldn’t bring ’em off in a cart with wheels,
so
you’d to sledge them. If it had weight,
the horse had to pull it forward, even
downhill - if the horse stopped, it stopped.
Been on snow, it
would’ve gone, run t’hoss over. No, same
as you were out on’t fell,
no; the horse had to pull it downhill even."
Edna Morland: "You loaded the outer corners
first, then the sides, and filled in the middle. You could get much
more on that way, stack it higher, maybe six feet high."
Joyce Postlethwaite: "When Ah was a lile
lass, Ah used to be given t’ job of leading t’ horse back from t’
field when the sled was loaded. Big horse, a Clydesdale. One day a
horse bee (warble fly) got amang t’ horse’s legs and it turned just
like that and got away on me and went all the way back up the field
wi’t hay fleein’ off."