Moving the cranberries (Explored)
Pipal barns
Loading the truck
Making room for more cranberries
Ready to be processed
Peek-a-boo.
In onbruik - Obsolete
Green fields
Filled with flowers
Ancient stonework
Cute as a little lamb
A lamb's playground
Clochán
Lambs and Clocháns (Explored)
Verdent Pastures.
Always look at the bright side
Cows Grazing.
Pond on Pett Level - Icklesham - Sussex 1 8 2006
Pett Level - a view to the west - East Sussex - 1…
Across Pett Level to Hogg Hill Mill - Icklesham -…
Farm in Zoeterwoude
Dry dam
H.F.F. - With 2 High Seats and 2 Fences
Paddock of Old Farm Equipment.
Three trees
Valley Farm.
Attractive pony
Knoll On A Local Farm.
Farm fields
Looking sheepish
Nanny and Billy Goats.
Farm in Zoeterwoude-Weipoort
Boeren blijven broodnodig
Coralling the cranberries
Handing the booms
Raking the cranberries
Pulling the Boom
Flooded Bog (Explored)
Unflooded cranberry bog
Floating cranberries
Giant tire - Spring Rain Farm
Spring Rain Farm
Spring Rain Farm
Farmland
Beautiful Alberta - prairie, foothills and mountai…
Quietly Grazing.
Rural Alberta
Old silo, south of the city
Hats as far as the eye can see
Whiskey & Titan
Passing Clouds.
Barn at Akesi Farms
Edible Reishi mushroom, Akesi Farms
Chicken at Akesi Farms
King Oyster mushrooms, edible and beautiful
From H.W.1 in South Waikato.
Just Curious.
House On The Hill
Dinner has arrived
Bye-Bye, Love 3
Wheat near Bishopstone 3 8 2019 a
Down a Farm Track.
Two Horses
Great Low Farm, Sterndale Moor, Derbyshire
Great Low Farm, Sterndale Moor, Derbyshire
1/1600 • f/16.0 • 100.0 mm • ISO 1250 •
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Corralled cranberries
Until the 1960s, cranberries, which grow low to the ground, were picked in a time consuming method. Today, wet or water harvesting is the primary method of harvesting cranberries. The bogs in which the cranberries grow are flooded with 1 - 1 1/2 feet of water the night before the harvest. The next day, the farmers use equipment called egg beaters to knock the berries off of the vines. The berries have air pockets in them and they float to the surface. The farmers then "coral" the berries by wading through the bog and forcing the fruit into one area with large rakes. The berries are then further confined with floating booms and suctioned onto a truck. They are taken to a factory where they are washed and canned or used in drinks and sauces. Berries that are dry harvested are often sold as fresh cranberries because they are handled less harshly in the harvesting process.
AIMG 3180
AIMG 3180
Frans Schols, Gabi Lombardo, RHH, Susanne Hoy and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Thank you very much for the interesting explanation!
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