Sandra Dodd, this made me think about you. I'm picking spinach, oranges and many different herbs in my mother in law garden with one of "those cars" that I forgot the name.Nice photo of the supports around the wheel. Picking spinach and oranges in the same place is amazing, to someone from New Mexico. :-)
Labels
4-H
advertisement
animal
animals
art
Australia
Avebury
background
Barrow
bench
boat
Bolivia
Brazil
broken
business
California
Canada
candid
cartoon
cat
chair
child
children
China
clothing
collection
color
Colorado
competition
Connecticut
connections
cooking
costume
crime
dining
elsewhere
England
event
family
film/tv
fire
Florida
food
fountain
France
friend
fun
furniture
game
garden
grouping
handcart
handtruck
history
holiday
Hollycombe
home
Honduras
human transport
humor
ideas
India
indonesia
inside
invention
Iran
Ireland
Kenya
Korea
Lego
Malaysia
Massachusetts
matching
meme
memory
Mexico
Minnesota
Mississippi
money
motorized
movie
museum
Netherlands
new
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
New Zealand
North Korea
Northern Ireland
odd use
old
Oregon
painting
performance
planter
play
playing
poetry
Pokemon
Pokemon Go
politics
portrait
Portugal
posed
powered
pub
puzzle
reference
resting
riding
rivetted
ruined
sales
Saudi Arabia
schematics
science
Scotland
sculpture
shadow
sign
song
South Africa
Spain
stables
story
stylized
Sweden
teapot
technology
Texas
theatre
tipping
toy
transit
truck
Tudor
Turkey
unschoolers
unschooling
upright
video
Vietnam
Wales
Washington
wooden
working
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Spinach, oranges and herbs (Portugal)
Cá Fernandes Maciel, of Lisbon, visiting her mother-in-law at Christmastime, wrote:
Friday, December 20, 2013
Winchester, UK, 2011
Used the image casually in a post called It makes much more sense, in which I quoted Ben Lovejoy saying
When we learned how to ride a bike, we thought that first way that we learned was the only way that a bike could be ridden. There was just no other way. Having ridden over 10,000 miles of roads and over 50 bike trails in the past six years, I can tell you that my initial experience on a bike was nothing like I've had as an adult. As with my cycling, I've realized there is more than one way to live our lives. Living life based upon principles is a better way for me than living by rules. It's more honest, respectful, truthful, and makes much more sense. Principles have allowed me to figure out that music is a journey and not a destination that ends when I reached a certain age. Principles have allowed me to realize that riding a bike is a means and not an end. Principles have allowed me to think further about better ways to parent than using someone else's rules. Principles, in short, do not limit me the way that rules once did.
SandraDodd.com/benrules
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Mother Goose coloring page from Dover Books
Dover books offers free sharing of some of its coloring books. This was a free digital sample, for printing out. I don't know, though, which Mother Goose rhyme it is illustrating. If anyone does know, please leave a note. And if you feel like coloring this or other things you print out feel free to lift this, and to go to http://www.doverpublications.com/csch088/index.html?s1=Google-Adwords&s4=coloring%20pages&s5=csch069 to sign up for free samples by e-mail.
AHA! December 21, 2013, got wise and googled it:
I remember the first part, so I will look later at my childhood Mother Goose book and see what it says! Maybe there was a picture there, too. (here it is)
AHA! December 21, 2013, got wise and googled it:
When I was a little boy, I lived by myself,
And all the bread and cheese I got I put upon a shelf;
The rats and the mice, they made such a strife,
I was forced to go to London to buy me a wife.
The streets were so broad, and the lanes were so narrow,
I was forced to bring my wife home in a wheelbarrow;
The wheelbarrow broke, and my wife had a fall,
And down came the wheelbarrow, wife and all.
I remember the first part, so I will look later at my childhood Mother Goose book and see what it says! Maybe there was a picture there, too. (here it is)
Monday, December 9, 2013
Christmas tree lot, Albuquerque
Truck, chainsaw, shovel, posthole diggers… Nice!
We bought our Christmas tree from the owner of these tools, southwest of Juan Tabo and Menaul.
We bought our Christmas tree from the owner of these tools, southwest of Juan Tabo and Menaul.
Friday, December 6, 2013
Delhi, India
Sweekriti Singh wrote: "My brain has begun associating wheelbarrows with you, so when I saw one here (in Delhi, India) this morning I had to share it..."
Monday, December 2, 2013
Salad Bowl with tools
Wheelbarrow Salad Bowl with Wooden Utensils, from the Uncommon Goods catalog. Sent by Schuyler Waynforth.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Boohbah Barrow
Though the original site is gone, I've found a way for you to get there.
The game is playable from a computer (maybe not from a tablet or phone) at Boobah Zone. What's below are just images from the game.
Go to Boobah Zone and let it load. Turn the sound on.
Click the box (made of changing colors and sparkles), and click until they show you the wheelbarrow. Each object out of the box is a link to a different wordless game.
You can help a guy fill it up with apples. I'm sorry the art cut off the very bottom; that's just the way they set it on the screen.
Go to Boobah Zone and let it load. Turn the sound on.
Click the box (made of changing colors and sparkles), and click until they show you the wheelbarrow. Each object out of the box is a link to a different wordless game.
You can help a guy fill it up with apples. I'm sorry the art cut off the very bottom; that's just the way they set it on the screen.
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Knitter targets wheelbarrow
Barbara Simmonds linked this with a note on Facebook: "Sharing for Sandra Dodd. This reflects both our interests."
click here to see because the old image was gone and I couldn't find free ones.
The knitting above is by Magda Sayeg. She didn't cover a real, regular wheelbarrow, but a larger, built sculpture of a wheelbarrow. And a giant watering can, for a Spring Show in Worcestershire, UK.
This info is from a site that's not there anymore. All the links on this post were gone!
Here's something about Magda Sayeg in English. She's in Austin: (a wordpress blog intro)
click here to see because the old image was gone and I couldn't find free ones.
The knitting above is by Magda Sayeg. She didn't cover a real, regular wheelbarrow, but a larger, built sculpture of a wheelbarrow. And a giant watering can, for a Spring Show in Worcestershire, UK.
This info is from a site that's not there anymore. All the links on this post were gone!
Magda Sayeg es una joven artista americana que descubrió en el tejido el placer de crear arte. Su movimiento llamado “La Guerrilla del Tejido” ya tuvo varios ataques alrededor del mundo, como México, China, Australia (Sidney y Canberra) Italia (Venecia y Milán), Suecia, Holanda, Alemania, Francia, Inglaterra.
Here's something about Magda Sayeg in English. She's in Austin: (a wordpress blog intro)
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Tortilla Flat (1942)
The world is filling with 75th Anniversary Wizard of Oz things, and in one of the special features is a brief scene from Tortilla Flat, because Terry the Terrier (the dog playing Toto) was in it (just a couple of years later). So was Frank Morgan, who had played the wizard.
So here's Frank Morgan, with a wheelbarrow. :-)
So here's Frank Morgan, with a wheelbarrow. :-)
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Sierra Madre, two wheelbarrows in one yard
In a pretty little edge-of-mountains, near-a-dam neighborhood in Sierra Madre, I saw two wheelbarrows. The second one was harder to spot.
Friday, October 25, 2013
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena
Pam Sorooshian and I had just been in the "European Art : 17th – 18th Centuries" rooms for a few moments when I said I was going to look for a wheelbarrow. The very next painting I saw had one. Cool!!!
The painting is by Jan Steen, a Dutch artist, in around 1668. Part of the description was "In front of an inn, a hopelessly inebriated young woman is being helped into a wheelbarrow." The title is "De wijn is een spotter," translated to English as "Wine is a Mocker."
More from the museum's site (added here July 24, 2014):
Wine is a Mocker, 1663-64
The painting is by Jan Steen, a Dutch artist, in around 1668. Part of the description was "In front of an inn, a hopelessly inebriated young woman is being helped into a wheelbarrow." The title is "De wijn is een spotter," translated to English as "Wine is a Mocker."
More from the museum's site (added here July 24, 2014):
Wine is a Mocker, 1663-64
The inscription above the door is from Proverbs 20:1, which reads: “Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging and whosoever is deceived thereby is not wise.” In front of an inn, a hopelessly inebriated young woman is being helped into a wheelbarrow. Although the woman’s low-cut dress and red stockings mark her as a prostitute, her rich and exquisitely delineated clothing indicate a more privileged status. Jan Steen subtly conveys the message that not only are those of superior position as susceptible as the lowly to the sins of drink, but that their disgrace is perhaps more pitiable because of the distance they have fallen.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Karen James, looking, in Japan
At a folk art museum in Fukuoka, Karen James found a model and an illustration. I would say "hand cart," and they're similar to one another. Does anyone know what might be in barrels that size? The captions below are Karen's, from her blog entry Last Day in Fukuoka:
I haven't found any real wheelbarrows, Sandra, but I did find this model one.
And this one illustrated on a wall. Unfortunately there was a poster in the way on the bottom right. I'll still keep my eyes peeled for the real thing.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Playing with the moon
This was being passed around Facebook without a credit, but I looked for it and found it. One image was named Laurent Laveder Wheelbarrow Moon. I don't know what the original name was.
There is an article about the photographer, which I don't know how to find full size, and it's in French anyway, but it's called Playing with the Moon.
(Links changed, but I've brought images from the Wayback Machine.)
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Sunday, September 29, 2013
A wheelbarrow full of money
Tony Robinson has a new series of humorous history books for kids. They're quite British and some of the jokes and references don't translate to American English or culture, but I got a set for Marty and for me. Marty knew about this story.
He knew of money carried in wheelbarrows. He didn't know whether a wheelbarrow was ever stolen. :-) I went to look and found photographs (whether posed or candid, I don't know).
With an image search, I came up with lots of images of money-filled wheelbarrows, but general art. Except for the one above, I don't think any were of German money between the wars.
He knew of money carried in wheelbarrows. He didn't know whether a wheelbarrow was ever stolen. :-) I went to look and found photographs (whether posed or candid, I don't know).
With an image search, I came up with lots of images of money-filled wheelbarrows, but general art. Except for the one above, I don't think any were of German money between the wars.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Northern Ireland, cool shed with a wheelbarrow
Sarah's neighbor's wheelbarrow, my camera's zoom, Portstewart, Northern Ireland
Thursday, September 19, 2013
New Zealand, Tribute to the Suffragettes
Andrea Downs Quenneville sent this. It was posted to facebook by a "A Mighty Girl," a catalog of books for girls.
Here's another angle that shows the wheelbarrow better. Does it hold a petition? Clarification is invited! I'm not finding the date of creation of the memorial, nor the artist's name.
Images should link to their original pages.
If someone knows the story of the creation of the sculpture... Colleen Prieto found info! The sculptor was Margriet Windhausen. It was dedicated in 1993, and the wheelbarrow is full of a big petition with over 30,000 names.
Here's another angle that shows the wheelbarrow better. Does it hold a petition? Clarification is invited! I'm not finding the date of creation of the memorial, nor the artist's name.
Images should link to their original pages.
If someone knows the story of the creation of the sculpture... Colleen Prieto found info! The sculptor was Margriet Windhausen. It was dedicated in 1993, and the wheelbarrow is full of a big petition with over 30,000 names.
The campaign produced three major petitions in 1891, 1892 and 1893. The 1893 petition with 31,872 signatures was the largest ever gathered in Australasia.
http://christchurchcitylibraries.com/Heritage/Places/Memorials/KateSheppard/
Italian, rusty with a big rock and a cactus
Cath Goudouchaouri wote:
a wheelbarrow for you, photo taken in South Italy (Peschici, Gargano, Provincia di Bari)
I asked if the cactus was in the wheelbarrow or on the other side of it. Cath said it was in it. "The plant is called figuier de barbarie in french... (latin name : Opuntia ficus-indica : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opuntia_ficus-indica) - you can eat the fruit but carefully : it has a very prickly skin !"
So, in English, prickly pear.
This is a good time to bring out a photo I took a couple of years ago in Austin. This one didn't seem to be planted, or art. The wheelbarrow's handles were broken, and I suspect it had been sitting there since a yard cleanup years ago, in which little cactus had been thrown in there to get rid of it.
It was out in the back with junk, but had turned itself to art, gradually, over the years.
That second cactus might not be prickly pear, and if anyone wants to ID the cactus, that would be great! Austin, downtown where the art studio tour was.
a wheelbarrow for you, photo taken in South Italy (Peschici, Gargano, Provincia di Bari)
I asked if the cactus was in the wheelbarrow or on the other side of it. Cath said it was in it. "The plant is called figuier de barbarie in french... (latin name : Opuntia ficus-indica : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opuntia_ficus-indica) - you can eat the fruit but carefully : it has a very prickly skin !"
So, in English, prickly pear.
This is a good time to bring out a photo I took a couple of years ago in Austin. This one didn't seem to be planted, or art. The wheelbarrow's handles were broken, and I suspect it had been sitting there since a yard cleanup years ago, in which little cactus had been thrown in there to get rid of it.
It was out in the back with junk, but had turned itself to art, gradually, over the years.
That second cactus might not be prickly pear, and if anyone wants to ID the cactus, that would be great! Austin, downtown where the art studio tour was.
Monday, September 16, 2013
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Kingdom (TV wheelbarrow)
Friday, September 13, 2013
Fourth day of rain, Albuquerque
I didn't notice until later, but I like the way one handle lines up with the tree and the other is framed outside the tree.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Wheelbarrows, Greek philosophy, ergonomics
Answer to what simple machines make up a wheelbarrow: the lever and the wheel and axle (according to ehow, anyway).
All over the internet is "wheelbarrows were invented by the Chinese," but I don't think it's valid. Their "wheelbarrow" (what English speakers called a wheelbarrow) is a whole different thing, and though it can do some things European wheelbarrows can't, theirs can't do some of what is quite normal for our little short-distance, imperfect wheelbarrows.
Thinking of what ours are used for might give some ideas for what I'm thinking of in way of features gathered and improved over hundreds of years.
Wheelbarrows carry more goods from place to place using less force than a person could carry them. In fact, a person would have to make several trips to carry the items by hand. With the help of the wheelbarrow's two simple machines---the lever and the wheel and axle---people can save time during the process of hauling.I think there might be more to mention in the way of ergonomics, and in traditional details that create more functionality than is at first apparent.
All over the internet is "wheelbarrows were invented by the Chinese," but I don't think it's valid. Their "wheelbarrow" (what English speakers called a wheelbarrow) is a whole different thing, and though it can do some things European wheelbarrows can't, theirs can't do some of what is quite normal for our little short-distance, imperfect wheelbarrows.
Thinking of what ours are used for might give some ideas for what I'm thinking of in way of features gathered and improved over hundreds of years.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Take-home, open-book no-time-limit test on Wheelbarrows.
Q: What Simple Machines Make a Wheelbarrow?
"Simple machine" is a concept at the intersection of physics, history, philosophy and art. So are wheelbarrows!
I'm not telling the answer until tomorrow, so maybe think about it, do all the looking-up you want to, and consider other conveyances and tools and contraptions for gardening and construction—cousins of wheelbarrows, maybe.
"Simple machine" is a concept at the intersection of physics, history, philosophy and art. So are wheelbarrows!
I'm not telling the answer until tomorrow, so maybe think about it, do all the looking-up you want to, and consider other conveyances and tools and contraptions for gardening and construction—cousins of wheelbarrows, maybe.
Monday, September 9, 2013
Electrician's Wheelbarrow
Photo by Alex Polikowsky, Olmstead County Free Fair, Minnesota, July 2013:
So in a place where there where wheelbarrows at just about every livestock stall and corner, even the electrician has a wheelbarrow for what look like neon lights.
Squarestock steel. Leg braces are bolted on, probably through the tray itself, all the way through. If I saw it in person, I would examine those covered handles. First guess, pipe shoved into the square stock, covered with rubber tips. I could be wrong. Maybe wood, shaped square, and then rounded.
So in a place where there where wheelbarrows at just about every livestock stall and corner, even the electrician has a wheelbarrow for what look like neon lights.
Squarestock steel. Leg braces are bolted on, probably through the tray itself, all the way through. If I saw it in person, I would examine those covered handles. First guess, pipe shoved into the square stock, covered with rubber tips. I could be wrong. Maybe wood, shaped square, and then rounded.
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Roboteiros, in Angola
These images are from an article called "Roboteiros," at
http://www.opais.net/pt/revista/?det=17205&id=1640&mid=
I found the article linked from No Tech Magazine: http://www.notechmagazine.com/wheelbarrows/, which said
The contemporary design is similar to the Ancient Chinese vehicle, except it uses straight boards and a car tyre.
The machine and the men pushing it are both called "roboteiros".
Friday, September 6, 2013
Squeaky Construction Worker
Thursday, September 5, 2013
One day 90 years ago...
This framed photo is for sale on Etsy. It's nice to see a photo of a child outside, not in a studio. A photo of a child with a wheelbarrow is even better! Maybe the wheelbarrow was new. I wish we could see the wheel better. The rest seems all to be of wood.
Here is the Etsy listing:
http://www.etsy.com/listing/126941925/antique-photograph-boy-in-overalls-with
http://www.etsy.com/listing/126941925/antique-photograph-boy-in-overalls-with
Monday, September 2, 2013
Cedar Crest, New Mexico
Outside True Value Hardware, Cedar Crest, September 2, 2013. The first four are plastic, the smaller two were steel. The two largest ones have stronger "legs" and two wheels. The green and blue ones have tube steel handles. I like the curves toward the axle on the blue one. The green one has the axle fastened to the frame the same way the wooden-handled barrows do.
You can click the image to see a larger version.
You can click the image to see a larger version.
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Chinese wheelbarrows
According to nameless people on the internet, the Chinese invented the wheelbarrow. It doesn't seem at first glance that they made a great job of it. Their wheel is big, and right in the middle, so needs to be covered up. So it's kind of a big fender with two running boards. There's a platform on either side, and maybe the "fender" is made of poles or slats so there are places to tie things.
Their source was "The Chinese Wheelbarrow" by Kris De Decker, and has this interesting bit (and a great deal more):
It was first in LowTech Magazine:
http://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2011/12/the-chinese-wheelbarrow.html#more
Resilience.org reprinted it:
http://www.resilience.org/stories/2012-01-03/how-downsize-transport-network-chinese-wheelbarrow-0
Kris De Decker's article is as much about the history of roads as of wheelbarrows, which is also fascinating. Please read it if you're at all interested in the history of China or Europe, or at least look at the pictures on both of them. There is a list of 21 sources on which the author drew there, too. I learned a lot!
The European wheelbarrow is a whole different design and for a different purpose. In the Chinese version, the wheel takes the place of a pack animal, and the shape of the frame reflects that. All the weight is on the axle. The European wheelbarrow is a version of a litter or a stretcher, or for workmen, a barrow designed to be carried by two people. So the wheel goes between the two handles on one end, and the remaining person has the other two handles, and half the weight.
The article shows a Chinese wheelbarrow carrying two people, and says they could carry six. Women were transported that way, and one of the photos above shows one who seems to have had bound feet. If there was only one passenger and the load had no counterweight, the article says the operator of the barrow would tilt the wheel so that it balanced that way.
European litters generally carried just one person. There are images from a French history of the wheelbarrow that show (in line drawings) people being transported. It's not as elegant or as dignified as the Chinese setup, and doesn't look nearly as comfortable. With a small wheel out front, in the European version, the "seating" isn't level.
So when articles say "the Chinese invented the wheelbarrow," they invented their wheelbarrow, not the European version, which has a lowlier purpose and smaller capacity.
I looked up the author, Kris de Decker, after writing the above. He owns "Low-tech Magazine." It's full of other interesting technological history and ideas.
I found an explanation on a page on sustainable transportation, that defends the design.The Chinese WheelbarrowFor being such a seemingly ordinary vehicle, the wheelbarrow has a surprisingly exciting history. This is especially true in the East, where it became a universal means of transportation for both passengers and goods, even over long distances. The Chinese wheelbarrow - which was driven by human labour, beasts of burden and wind power - was of a different design than its European counterpart. By placing a large wheel in the middle of the vehicle instead of a smaller wheel in front, one could easily carry three to six times as much weight than if using a European wheelbarrow. |
Compared to a two-wheeled cart or a four-wheeled wagon, a wheelbarrow was much cheaper to build because wheel construction was a labour-intensive job. Although the wheelbarrow required a road, a very narrow path (about as wide as the wheel) sufficed, and it could be bumpy. The two handles gave an intimacy of control that made the wheelbarrow very manoeuvrable.There are two versions of the longer article, and each has a few photos the other doesn't have:
It was first in LowTech Magazine:
http://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2011/12/the-chinese-wheelbarrow.html#more
Resilience.org reprinted it:
http://www.resilience.org/stories/2012-01-03/how-downsize-transport-network-chinese-wheelbarrow-0
Kris De Decker's article is as much about the history of roads as of wheelbarrows, which is also fascinating. Please read it if you're at all interested in the history of China or Europe, or at least look at the pictures on both of them. There is a list of 21 sources on which the author drew there, too. I learned a lot!
The European wheelbarrow is a whole different design and for a different purpose. In the Chinese version, the wheel takes the place of a pack animal, and the shape of the frame reflects that. All the weight is on the axle. The European wheelbarrow is a version of a litter or a stretcher, or for workmen, a barrow designed to be carried by two people. So the wheel goes between the two handles on one end, and the remaining person has the other two handles, and half the weight.
The article shows a Chinese wheelbarrow carrying two people, and says they could carry six. Women were transported that way, and one of the photos above shows one who seems to have had bound feet. If there was only one passenger and the load had no counterweight, the article says the operator of the barrow would tilt the wheel so that it balanced that way.
European litters generally carried just one person. There are images from a French history of the wheelbarrow that show (in line drawings) people being transported. It's not as elegant or as dignified as the Chinese setup, and doesn't look nearly as comfortable. With a small wheel out front, in the European version, the "seating" isn't level.
So when articles say "the Chinese invented the wheelbarrow," they invented their wheelbarrow, not the European version, which has a lowlier purpose and smaller capacity.
I looked up the author, Kris de Decker, after writing the above. He owns "Low-tech Magazine." It's full of other interesting technological history and ideas.
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Mobile Sandbox with Dinosaurs
Jo Isaac wrote, "I know you have a thing for wheelbarrows...this is how we used ours for a few years - mobile sand-box!" (in the Adelaide Hills)
I'm back to add a follow-up:
Funny—Kai saw the picture of the sand-barrow in your blog while I was looking at it, and asked if I could put the sand back in it! It's the first nice day of Spring, so I hosed it down (we'd been using it to haul firewood!) and patched up its holes, and put the sand back in. He played out there for hours—but he's so tall now, he has to stoop down to get in there!Jo, in Australia
I asked, "Spring starts on the first of the month and not the equinox?"
Jo wrote, "Yes, it's very odd...after growing up in England, I can never get used to it."
Chama, New Mexico
This is the wheelbarrow of Candace Piuma, in Chama, New Mexico.
My sister posted the photos with this note:
The wheelbarrow is riveted. I don't think I had seen a riveted wheelbarrow before.
My sister posted the photos with this note:
Candace Piuma is an amazing gardener & a wonderful artist. Come see her jewelry this week-end at Chama's Studio Tour. She's at Iron Horse Realty across from The High Country.The High Country (restaurant and bar) is where Irene performs pretty often, with her harmonica-playing friend, Dylan Loman. Irene has worked there for years, landscaping and bookkeeping and sometimes working in the package store.
The wheelbarrow is riveted. I don't think I had seen a riveted wheelbarrow before.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)