with a sythe.
The Hay Harvest was created in 1565.
That depends on the farm. However a farm isn't a farm without a tractor. Other machinery include hay balers, swathers, hay bines, combines, tilling machinery, seeders, mowers, etc.
Hay Harvest at Éragny was created in 1901.
Making Hay with Modern Machinery - 1913 was released on: USA: 20 August 1913
drag and drop the tools
Most farmers DO use machinery- if they can afford it, and it is available in their area. A tractor, plow, combine, hay mower, etc are all machinery.
The hay knife is a hand tool while a scythe is usually pulled by horses or machinery
A hay bundle machine is commonly referred to as a baler. It is a piece of agricultural machinery used to compress and bundle hay into manageable shapes for storage and transportation.
If rocks or stones are in bales of hay or wool they could damage machinery used to move or to process the hay or wool. Also, cows would love hay but not "stones" for dinner!
It is far better to harvest the hay now because you can never have too much hay. You never know when the next drought period will hit or how long a drought will really last, nor will you ever know how long and/or hard a season of winter will be. Extra hay is much better to have than too little hay. After you cut and bale up your hay crop you can let the cows out on the field to do a bit of a clean-up job, which no doubt they will enjoy thoroughly.
This depends on the exact machinery in question. Overall, machinery is used for getting work done or completing a goal. In a metal shop, for instance, a lot of the machinery is for cutting, bending, welding, stamping, or coating. Farm machinery is for completing farming relating tasks such as plowing, cultivating, harvesting, making hay, and so on.
That is a type of farm machinery that does a combination of tasks, such as cutting and baling hay.