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News from Garfield Farm |
CAMPTON HILLS, IL - Leave the hustle and worries of the 21st
century behind and step into the rhythm of life in the 1800s. Join
instructors Chuck Bauer and Bob McCann on Saturday, September 26th, at
Garfield Farm Museum for an Ox Driving Workshop, 9:00 am - 3:00 pm.
Oxen were the driving force behind farming from the
beginning of animal power until the mechanization of agriculture. The
ox team was absolutely essential for the Illinois prairie farmer.
Breaking new fields required a lot of power. Heavy draft horses were
not being imported yet and riding horses did not have the strength to
pull a plow through the heavy prairie grass roots. Oxen, mature cows or
steers that have been trained to work, were readily available, easy to
equip and cheap. A well-conditioned ox team could be expected to plow
about an acre a day and could pull 2/3 of their own weight. Because
working the prairie was so hard, it often took 2 to 3 or more teams
working together to pull the plow. There were teamsters that made their
living going from farm to farm breaking new fields.
By the 1850s, most of the prairie had been planted
and new machines needed speed rather than strength to make them work.
Horses were taking over the fieldwork. But many of the old farmers kept
their ox teams on the farm up into the 1860s. It is hard to beat the
steady pace and the calm disposition of an ox. To this day in other
parts of the world, oxen are still vital for small scale farming.
Selective small scale loggers in New England use oxen to lessen the
environmental impact, that machinery can cause.
The workshop will teach participants how to groom,
yoke and drive both teams and single oxen. Instruction will also be
given on the selection, feeding, and training of calves. The cost of
the full day workshop is $60. Lunch is included. Garfield Farm Museum
is located 5 miles west of Geneva, IL, off of Illinois Rt. 38 on
Garfield Road. Garfield Farm is a former historically intact 1840s
prairie farmstead and teamster inn that is being restored as a working
1840s farm. To reserve contact (630) 584-8485 or email at
info@garfieldfarm.org. Spaces are limited, please respond promptly.