Mowing with horses
David Trotter: "You would be up in a
morning, say four o’clock, with a pair of horses, and mow, and then
come home and milk, leave your mowing machine in the field sort of
thing.
"If it was a small field you'd mow it
in one, but big fields, you just used to mow it in beds then. You
didn't mow a lot, well you didn't know how the weather was going to
be, if you could get a lot - well, it used to take us a month to haytime.
Same as today they'll mow the bloody lot won't they, and then they'll
work it and they'll get it all, sort of in a week. If it was a small
field then you'd mow it in one, but big fields, you just used to mow
it in beds.
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"There was one spot we mowed with a single
horse: the mower had a Petter engine on, and that drove the cutter-bar,
and the horse just had to pull it, but usually it took two horses,
you know, they had to go at a fair old rake o' knots."
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"First spot I ever went at, you used to go
down with your mowing machine, it would be sort of on the inside,
your horse would go down the dyke-side (field boundary: hedge or wall),
and you would mow this way round, lefthanded, happen about four times,
and then somebody would come on, usually t'farm lad, and would rake
that back, as they call it taking the backswathe back, and he would
roll it against itself, over, so that you could come in with your
horse, tother way on, righthanded, and mow the rest. And then youd
to come with a ley (scythe) and mow right up to the dyke-side, so
you got every bit of hay.
"Now the first time that we didn't
do that was down at Alec Hornby's. Up till
then, whenever I mowed, we took the
backswathe out. Anyway, I was mowing,
and I got the field
finished, and I was going to do t'backswathe,
and Alec's father said, "no, no, don't
bother wi' that, no," he said, "we'll
just put cows
in," which is what they do now. But they
take it younger now, you see; when we
were mowing, you weren't taking it until
sort of July
or August, whereas they take it in April
and May now don't they. When it goes
for silage, it isn't that long, and cows
go in afterwards
and clean off round the edges. It used
to be real long and tough, three foot
high, you know, and then they wanted
every bit of winter
feed they could get off the field."
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