Farm Power and Mechanization for Small Farms in Sub-Saharan Africa

Farm Power and Mechanization for Small Farms in Sub-Saharan Africa

Author: B. G. Sims

Publisher: FAO

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 98

ISBN-13:

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Many previous publications on farm mechanization, draught animal power, hand tool technology, etc. have tended to be narrowly focused. The topic of farm power and mechanization also tended to be separated from the actual process of growing crops. This manual looks at putting the different sources of farm power, mechanization, machines, equipment and tools in a much broader context. Farm power requirements need to be viewed with reference to rural livelihoods and to farming systems as well as to the critical area of labour saving in HIV/AIDS-hit populations. No one particular type of technology is advocated.


Horse-Powered Farming for the 21st Century

Horse-Powered Farming for the 21st Century

Author: Stephen Leslie

Publisher: Chelsea Green Publishing

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 418

ISBN-13: 160358613X

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Now is a time of exciting new developments for live animal power. As the numbers of adherents to this way of life grow, ecologically minded farmers in their fields are developing efficient horse-drawn systems, and equipment manufacturers in small shops all across North America and Europe are coming forth with new innovations in ground-drive technology that have us poised on the cusp of another agricultural revolution--with working horses, mules, donkeys, and oxen at the heart of it. --Publisher.


Where Have All the Horses Gone?

Where Have All the Horses Gone?

Author: Jonathan V. Levin

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2017-07-19

Total Pages: 249

ISBN-13: 1476628378

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A century ago, horses were ubiquitous in America. They plowed the fields, transported people and goods within and between cities and herded livestock. About a million of them were shipped overseas to serve in World War I. Equine related industries employed vast numbers of stable workers, farriers, wainwrights, harness makers and teamsters. Cities were ringed with fodder-producing farmland, and five-story stables occupied prime real estate in Manhattan. Then, in just a few decades, the horses vanished in a wave of emerging technologies. Those technologies fostered unprecedented economic growth, and with it a culture of recreation and leisure that opened a new place for the horse as an athletic teammate and social companion.