Difference between revisions of "Zebu cart"
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[[File:Zebu cart 001.jpg|600px]] | [[File:Zebu cart 001.jpg|600px]] | ||
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Innumerable zebu carts can be seen in and around the town Ambanja, the region, and across Madagascar. | Innumerable zebu carts can be seen in and around the town Ambanja, the region, and across Madagascar. | ||
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One typical workshop, run by Mr Theodore, <!-- 032 49 341 77)--> can be found in the town centre. His workshop employs six skilled woood workers and welders assembling about 50 carts per year, all in the same design and model. Everything is done manually without electricity. A cart takes about a week to produce and costs 1,800,000 (about USD 400). | One typical workshop, run by Mr Theodore, <!-- 032 49 341 77)--> can be found in the town centre. His workshop employs six skilled woood workers and welders assembling about 50 carts per year, all in the same design and model. Everything is done manually without electricity. A cart takes about a week to produce and costs 1,800,000 (about USD 400). | ||
− | The tradition of these eco-friendly vehicles, keeps cars and pollution to a minimum. | + | These humble two-wheeled vehicles are as relevant today as they were hundreds of years ago providing an indispensable transport for farmers distributing their agricultural crops. The tradition of these eco-friendly vehicles, keeps cars and air-pollution to a minimum. |
[[File:Zebu cart 003.jpg|600px]] | [[File:Zebu cart 003.jpg|600px]] |
Revision as of 05:43, 17 August 2024
It's early morning at the Sambirano crossing, there's a bit of a traffic jam, caused not by motor vehicles but by ox-powered carts transporting freshly harvested crops from the countryside into the central marketplace of Ambanja.
Innumerable zebu carts can be seen in and around the town Ambanja, the region, and across Madagascar.
Dozens of zebu cart workshops exist in Ambanja.
One typical workshop, run by Mr Theodore, can be found in the town centre. His workshop employs six skilled woood workers and welders assembling about 50 carts per year, all in the same design and model. Everything is done manually without electricity. A cart takes about a week to produce and costs 1,800,000 (about USD 400).
These humble two-wheeled vehicles are as relevant today as they were hundreds of years ago providing an indispensable transport for farmers distributing their agricultural crops. The tradition of these eco-friendly vehicles, keeps cars and air-pollution to a minimum.