casper74
Member
- Location
- North Yorkshire
Feed for cattle or sheep apparentlywhats that?
Feed for cattle or sheep apparentlywhats that?
You mean a cobTeacake around here is a plain Bap, in Sheffield it's a Breadcake, others think of it as a bap with fruit added.
We've got dripples on our bale trailer what do others call them
You mean a cob
Having ancestors round Herefordshire borders they always called the funnel used to fill the tractor a tundish
Was told it was proper Herefordshire speak
Gu-sh!t. Is how is pronounced in Doric here. I have had some fun over the years being brought up speaking Doric then working in Cheshire and Hampshire. Loads of different words.How many names are there for the runs up and down a field when the headland is encountered at an angle, so a triangle shaped piece is left? Scoots, Running work, Short work, etc I'm sure there are load more.
Same goes for headlands: end rigs, turn rows, outside breeds. In the US most seemed to call them the end rows, but that was mainly on corn/maize where they literally were rows
Scubbin here.... when I still used one!!How about the scuvvin for shovelling the beet or swedes or whatever
Yes that’s the oneDoes your have a lolly pop shape at top of it ,still have one what theynused on yorkshire wolds when fording yows or lams on tonnups or mustard ,to knock sheep net stakes in ,the ones with metal ring on top tomstop them splitting and had a nail top bottommto hang wire on
ScuttleWhisket was the carrying vessel that you pronged your chopped wurzels into to feed the bullocks
We have an iron bar here that tapers out for 6 inches, then has a forged cup before tapering to the top. Was used for baring holes for iron hurdles before knocking them in to fold sheep on winter forage.I used to work with some Lincolnshire lads who used a short,thick steel bar, pointed at one end and with the middle bit forged square for knocking stakes into the ground. They referred to it as a Gablick. Does anyone else recognise this?
I'm from South Devon (but not the S Hams) and all the above is familiar.
Use a beetle to drive a post in after you've made a hole with a bar iron. Mend a gap in a hedge with a Devon Shovel (long handle, unlike a normal spade). Father used to make field gates out of shivers (sawn timbers) Farmer next door had a hay shed clad in zinc (c.g.i.) and used to "tetch out" freshly mown grass before he would "larr up" hay into rows for baling. Bales would be thrown onto the trailer using a "eevil" (pitch fork)
After ploughing in the Autumn father would "draw up the voard" (move soil to the top of the field) -but I doubt if anyone under 60 knows anything about that
I thought a Pike was a "pitch fork"That could also be the thieves who take the sheep
Scots too but not pronounced -ck but -ch as in loch.have you heard of a "sheugh" pronounced more like~ "shuck"
Or cut roundsThres no split or tuff in that poster.
Im still not sure when a split becomes a tuff or vice versa
Points. Which becomes pints scots dialiecHow many names are there for the runs up and down a field when the headland is encountered at an angle, so a triangle shaped piece is left? Scoots, Running work, Short work, etc I'm sure there are load more.
Same goes for headlands: end rigs, turn rows, outside breeds. In the US most seemed to call them the end rows, but that was mainly on corn/maize where they literally were rows