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  2. Harvest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvest

    Reaping is the cutting of grain or pulses for harvest, typically using a scythe, sickle, or reaper. [2] On smaller farms with minimal mechanization, harvesting is the most labor-intensive activity of the growing season. On large mechanized farms, harvesting uses farm machinery, such as the combine harvester. Automation has increased the ...

  3. Reaper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reaper

    Reaping is usually distinguished from mowing, which uses similar implements, but is the traditional term for cutting grass for hay, rather than reaping cereals. The stiffer, dryer straw of the cereal plants and the greener grasses for hay usually demand different blades on the machines.

  4. Sickle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sickle

    A bagging hook, badging hook, fagging hook, reap hook or rip hook, is a large sickle usually with an offset handle so that the user's knuckles do not make contact with the ground. The Oxford dictionary gives the definition of the word to bag, or badge, as the cutting of grain by hand.

  5. Scythe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scythe

    There is an international scything competition held at Goričko [17] where people from Austria, Hungary, Serbia, and Romania, or as far away as Asia enter to showcase their culturally unique method of reaping crops. [18] In 2009, a Japanese man showcased a wooden reaping tool with a metal edge, which he used to show how rice was cut.

  6. Combine harvester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combine_harvester

    The name of the machine is derived from the fact that the harvester combined multiple separate harvesting operations – reaping, threshing or winnowing and gathering – into a single process around the start of the 20th century. [2] A combine harvester still performs those operation principles.

  7. Sheaf (agriculture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheaf_(agriculture)

    Wheat sheaves near King's Somborne.Here the individual sheaves have been put together into a stook ("stooked") to dry. A sheaf of grain on a plaque Sheafing machine. A sheaf (/ ʃ iː f /; pl.: sheaves) is a bunch of cereal-crop stems bound together after reaping, traditionally by sickle, later by scythe or, after its introduction in 1872, by a mechanical reaper-binder.

  8. Agricultural machinery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_machinery

    The name derives from its combining four separate harvesting operations—reaping, threshing, gathering, and winnowing—into a single process. Among the crops harvested with a combine are wheat , rice , oats , rye , barley , corn ( maize ), sorghum , soybeans , flax ( linseed ), sunflowers and rapeseed .

  9. Gleaning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gleaning

    Woolgathering is a practice similar to gleaning, but for wool. The practice was of collecting bits of wool that had gotten caught on bushes and fences or fallen on the ground as sheep passed by. The meandering perambulations of a woolgatherer give rise to the idiomatic sense of the word as meaning aimless wandering of the mind. [36]