you don't need a tool you just go up to it and press the A buttun and you harvest it.
A winnowing fan is an agricultural tool shaped like a sickle. It is used in harvesting crops by reaping of the crop.
Shaduf: a simple irrigation tool used to lift water from a lower level to a higher level. Plow: an essential tool for preparing the soil for planting crops. Sickle: a tool used for harvesting crops such as wheat or barley.
This tool was used during harvesting to separate a portion of the hay so it could be easily cut with a reaping hook or scythe.
The "Grim Reaper" carries a tool that was used to cut crops or grass before the invention of combine harvesters. This tool was called a "scythe" and the people harvesting the crops were called "reapers" - hence the name for "Death" - the Grim Reaper who comes to harvest people.
The Sumerians invented sickles. (Mesopotamia)
The grim reaper's traditional second weapon is a scythe, often depicted as a long-handled tool with a curved blade used for harvesting crops. Symbolically, it represents the harvesting or cutting of life, which the grim reaper is said to do when it comes to claim a person's soul.
Fish hooks are worn as a symbol of Polynesian culture. Once used as a tool for harvesting marine life, the fish hook is now reminiscent of an ancient craft and lifestyle.
I believe a chermesh is either a sickle or a scythe. A kind of harvesting knife.
If a harvesting tool (pickaxe, hatchet, etc...) is enchanted with fortune, it has a possibility of dropping multiple materials when harvesting. For example, mining diamond ore with a pickaxe with fortune will have a possibility of dropping two diamonds instead of one.
The plow. At first, it was only made of wood, but as technology advanced and forging iron became possible, plows became more efficient.
A sickle is an old farm tool that was used to harvest grain and grass, etc. If you are referring to sickle cell anemia, its called that because of the abnormal sickle shape of the cells.
Rye is very similar to wheat in its structure. As such, most of the techniques used in harvesting rye are used in harvesting wheat, usually through a machine known as a combine.