it is a cradle for your grain.
Before mechanized harvesting (before 1840 CE) grain was cut with a scythe. The cut grain was gathered into sheaves and stooks. A good worker could cut 2 acres of grain a day. The cradle was an attachment of a basket or wood fingers behind the scythe blade that allowed the cut grain to be tossed or dropped in a swath to allow easier sheaving and stooking.
You have to be the judge on what to use. The type of wood (soft or hard, tight or loose grain) will determine what you use, a knife or rotary tool with cutter bits. suggestion: Hard tight grain use the rotary tool, soft loose grain you can use a knife. Good-Luck
The Cradle was created in 2010.
Out of the Cradle was created in 1988.
Noun - as in "put the baby in the cradle"Verb - as in "cradle the puppy in your arms"
I will cradle him in my arms.The cradle was broken.
A twist cradle
Grain is believed to have originated in the Middle East region, specifically in the Fertile Crescent, which includes parts of modern-day Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Israel. This area is often referred to as the "cradle of civilization" and is where early farming and agriculture practices developed around 10,000 years ago.
The word 'cradle' is both a noun (cradle, cradles) and a verb (cradle, cradles, cradling, cradled). Examples:Noun: The baby will need a new crib, her cradle is already too small.Verb: His grandma will cradle him in her arms for hours.
The city of Montgomery was called the Cradle of the Confederacy.
using the word cradle
Cradle of civilization