Cutting: The old timers used a scythe to cut their wheat. (Lehman's has several of them for about a hundred dollars. You can get a catalog for $3 by calling 330-857-5757. Or, if you'd like to go directly to the source, please take a look at http://www.scythesupply.com/). I still don't have scything down pat. An old timer taught me. He makes it look effortless, and I guess it is for him. Instead of just swinging it, he also moves the scythe blade forward through the wheat. It's important to keep the scythe razor sharp or it won't do it's job.
Threshing: The stooks are now ready to be brought in from the field to where you are going to thresh them. This is done with a flail. I made mine from two large willows, about 1 1/2 inches in diameter. They are connected with a rope through holes drilled through their ends. Yes they look a lot like great big nunchakus. Mine were home made, and were not perfectly straight, but they still worked just great.
Take a stook, open it up on a large canvas tarp, and start beating the daylights out of it with the flail. I did this out on the grass so the flail wouldn't break the kernels or beat holes in the tarp which I expect it would have done had I threshed it on concrete. After the wheat is beat out of the straw fairly well, the next step is to pick up the straw and move it off to the side. Be careful you don't throw any heads of wheat away doing this. What you have left is a lot of straw mixed in with wheat at various stages of threshing. The easiest way I found to get the straw out of the wheat was to put it through a very coarse sieve. I used a webbed plastic in-basket which worked great. This also worked good for catching the wheat heads that needed to go back on the threshing floor to be beat out with the next stook. |
At this point the wheat is full of chaff - the fibrous outer shell that surrounds each kernel of wheat on the head. You need a windy day, or a big fan to get rid of this. As the wind always blows where I live, I throw it up into the air like people have been doing for thousands of years. The wheat is a lot heavier than the chaff so it falls to the ground first. The chaff is blown away. I also did this on a big tarp so it wouldn't be so hard to collect the wheat. Finally, after lots of throwing, it was clean enough to suit me.
a very good feeling, even if it is a lot of work. |
| These photos forwarded by Charles Ragen. Charles says he can help get you a winnowing machine if you'd like one. | ||
![]() An old, hand powered Chinese winnowing machine. The circular piece on the right is the hand driven fan. Wheat trickles in from the top funnel and as it falls the cross wind blows air through the falling grain. The fullest, heavier kernels fall in the first chute and are used for human consumption, the lighter seeds fall into the second chute and are used for animal feed. The lightest material - the chaff, flies straight out the back. Winnowers like the one shown above were used mainly in south China for rice--suitable to that particular climate and topography with small plots in the hills and valleys where there were many windless days. | ![]() An old, hand powered grinding mill still in use in China today. As the wheel is so wide and the radius of the turn so sharp, rather than just rolling over the grain, it also drags the grain which helps in the grinding process. This particular grinder is located in the Northern Shandong countryside a few miles from Confucius's native place. The grinder is called a Qufu, pronounced Chewfoo, and is the village communal stone grinder made from granite. It is used by these women to crack corn for their hogs and chickens. | ![]() An old, hand powered grain grinder. Grain is fed into the center of the upper stone. As it turns, the grain moves from the center to the outer edges and is ground in the process. This limestone grinder is still in use in the 3 Gorges of the Yangzi River Valley. It is used to prepare soy beans for tofu making as well as grinding up anything. Every family has a set--or at least had a set in bygone days. By the way, this town, now 400 feet above the water, will become river front property in late 2003 when the reservoir behind the dam fills. |
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Revised: 10 Aug 01