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Ahem... All you need is a Yorkshire terrier, a headscarf and a blue rinse and the outfit is complete.
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Sent from my SM-G920F using Tapatalk
Ahem... All you need is a Yorkshire terrier, a headscarf and a blue rinse and the outfit is complete.
The chinese had a peculiar one wheeled cart described in this article. I recommend anyone to poke around the site too. Lots of other interesting ideas.
http://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2011/12/the-chinese-wheelbarrow.html
What a load of twaddle. When you load up a european wheelbarrow, you put the heavy load over the wheel; the 'man' doesn't take half the load. Any labourer knows this. The art of loading is getting it just right, so if you are going down ramps, the barrow doesn't flip forward, taking you with it!On the European wheelbarrow the wheel was (and is) invariably placed at the furthest forward end of the barrow, so that the weight of the burden is equally distributed between the wheel and the man pushing it.
That article on the chinese wheelbarrow was written by someone who has never done a serious amount of grifting
What a load of twaddle. When you load up a european wheelbarrow, you put the heavy load over the wheel; the 'man' doesn't take half the load. Any labourer knows this. The art of loading is getting it just right, so if you are going down ramps, the barrow doesn't flip forward, taking you with it!
The only time it is evenly distributed is when it is something really sloppy like concrete (barrowing that is back-breaking and the guys who do it are built like fork-lifts).
What a funny, great thread this is!
In addi5ion, mrcharlie, I would say the Chinese de#ugn has some serious short omings, like the difficulty of adding a bucket, and carrying bulky goods whilst keeping the size of the wheelbarrow to a managable size.
If the Chinese w. barrow was so fantastic, how come most goods were carried bodily by the Chinese?
China had roads, very big ones, I've seen on the TV part of the silk road about the same width as the dual carridgeways. As for the wheel, who really used the wheel anyway up until the invention of tarmac. Stage coaches where the few uses I can think of, but we built canals (3 mph) and then rail roads to get around the slowness of canals to get round having to transport things by road, I think the wheel was only ever used locally at a large scale, every one else either rode or marched?
I am surprised nobody has mentioned a travois. As used by many cultures over many millennia in road less terrain.