Zebu cart

Revision as of 12:23, 18 August 2024 by CampMaster (talk | contribs)

Revision as of 12:23, 18 August 2024 by CampMaster (talk | contribs)

It's sunrise in the Sambirano Valley and a small traffic jam on the bridge over the river, caused not by cars but by slow-moving zebu carts. The passengers and drivers of the ox-powered vehicles are mostly farmers en route to sell their crops in the town's central marketplace.

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Zebu carts, or charrettes à zebu as they are know, are common in and around Ambanja, the region, and across much of the country.

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Dozens of workshops produce charrettes in Ambanja. One such workshop in the town centre is run by Mr Theodore, who with his team of six skilled carpenters builds and assembles around 50 charrettes per year, all manually crafted without the use of electrical power tools.

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The design and model are always the same: A simple two-wheeler which easily attaches to one or more zebus.

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These charrette remains as practical and relevant among farmers today as they have for some hundreds of years.

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A charrette takes about one week to build and costs 1,800,000 (USD 400).

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The countless farmers keeping the tradition deserve recognition for their collective effort in protecting the environment by reducing the number of petrol-powered cars on the roads.

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