lwiley
Loc: Los Banos, CA, USA
We found more hand farming tools that my family can use when the Green New Deal is implemented.
The two handed scythe we believe belonged to my wife's maternal Italian Immigrant grandfather from the 1920s.
The two-man crosscut saw (Misery Whip) was used by my wife's paternal grandfather and uncles from the 1940s.
The Milking Barn was built by my Wife's father in the early 1950s.
Two Handed Scythe
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Download)
Two Man Crosscut Saw (Misery Whip)
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Download)
1950s 4 Cows Hand Milking Barn and Milk House
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Download)
Interesting. I remember those tools and my cousin and I one Saturday helping our grandfather cut firewood with a crosscut saw. Also remember my mother doing laundry on a washboard.
JRiepe wrote:
Interesting. I remember those tools and my cousin and I one Saturday helping our grandfather cut firewood with a crosscut saw. Also remember my mother doing laundry on a washboard.
Great set. My Grandfather had a Scythe just like that one and the taught me how to use it. You always carried a sharpening stone when you used it. Pulled a crosscut saw once for fun. You know what? It wasn't fun
I have a scythe just like that in my basement, probably from my Grandfather's farm.
lwiley wrote:
We found more hand farming tools that my family can use when the Green New Deal is implemented.
The two handed scythe we believe belonged to my wife's maternal Italian Immigrant grandfather from the 1920s.
The two-man crosscut saw (Misery Whip) was used by my wife's paternal grandfather and uncles from the 1940s.
The Milking Barn was built by my Wife's father in the early 1950s.
Very interesting and informative family history. Thanks
When I was a kid my Dad had a scythe like that one. I had a lot of rabbits and he would use the scythe to cut tall grass for my rabbits. I tried it but was too short for it to work well.
The scythe and crosscut - as a 1960s teenager in Ireland I used both but mastered neither. My grandfather was master of the scythe. Thanks for the memories.
Still using our scythe and loving it, Yes, you do need a sharpening stone close at hand.
I still have those tools. They are in dry dock now, replaced by something more efficient.
I'm old enough (93) that as a farm kid I have used every one of these but don't remember ever hearing the saw called a misery whip.
ad8rr
Loc: Jackson, Michigan
I just bought a new European Scythe from Scythe Supply in Perry, ME. Excellent tool and much easier to use than my gas powered string trimmer. It also keeps my nearly 76-year-old body moving!
lwiley
Loc: Los Banos, CA, USA
Richard Spencer wrote:
I'm old enough (93) that as a farm kid I have used every one of these but don't remember ever hearing the saw called a misery whip.
Found that reference from an article on Google, and realized from conversations from my father-in-law and his brothers on how the long two man saws had a tendency to bend and whip if the two men got out of sync.
Nice to have family items like that around. Nice photos.
Love the background in #1!
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