Zebu cart
It's sunrise over the Sambirano Valley. A small traffic jam on the bridge leading into the town centre of Ambanja builds up. This congestion, however, is not caused by cars but by zebu carts. The drivers and passengers of these ox-powered vehicles have been moving slowly since darkness till dawn filled with daily fresh crops from the countryside on their way to sell in the town's fruit and vegetable markets.
Zebu carts, known as Charrettes à zébu, are common in and around Ambanja and across much of the country.
Dozens of workshops produce charrettes in Ambanja. One of them is led by Mr Theodore, who, along with his team of six skilled carpenters, manually assembles around 50 charrettes per year without using electrical power tools.
The design and model are always the same: A simple two-wheeler that easily attaches to one or more zebus.
These charrettes remain as practical and relevant among farmers today as they have for hundreds of years.
A charrette takes about one week to build and costs 1,800,000 Ariary (USD 400).
Thanks to the thousands of Malagasy farmers for preserving the environment by their traditional mode of transportation.
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