Machine shears
Machine shears, known as handpieces,
operate in a similar manner to human
hair-clippers in that a power-driven toothed
blade, known as a cutter, is driven back and
forth over the surface of a comb and the
wool is cut from the animal. The original
machine shears were powered by a fixed
hand-crank linked to the handpiece by a
shaft with only two universal joints, which
afforded a very limited range of motion.
Later models have more joints to allow
easier positioning of the handpiece on the
animal. Electric motors on each stand have
generally replaced overhead gear for driving
the handpieces. The jointed arm is replaced
in many instances with a
flexible shaft. Smaller motors allowed
the production of shears in which the motor
is in the handpiece; these are generally not
used by professional shearers as the weight
and heat of the motor becomes bothersome
with long use.
A culture has evolved out of the practice of sheep shearing, especially in post-colonial Australia and New Zealand. Shearing the Rams, a painting by Australian impressionist painter Tom Roberts is considered to be iconic of the livestock-growing culture or "life on the land" in Australia.
For an inversion, Michael Leunig's Ramming the Shears can be seen as a sign of the shifts in Australian culture, and the extent to which the dominant rural culture is being eroded by an increasingly urban population.
The expression that Australia's wealth rode on the sheep's back in parts of the twentieth century no longer has the currency it once had.
Many stations across Australia no longer carry sheep due to lower wool prices, drought and other disasters, but their shearing sheds remain, in a wide variety of materials and styles, and have been the subject of books and documentation for heritage authorities. Some farmers are reluctant to remove either the equipment or the sheds, and many unused sheds remain intact.
Contests
Sheep shearing and shed-handing competitions are held regularly in parts of the world, particularly Ireland, the UK, South Africa, New Zealand and Australia.As sheep shearing is an arduous task, speed shearers, for all types of equipment and sheep, are usually very fit and well trained. In Wales a sheep shearing contest is one of the events of the Royal Welsh Show, the country's premier agricultural show held near Builth Wells.
References
- "The Land" (2008-03-13). The Land. Richmond: Rural Press.
- "The Bowen Technique". Retrieved on 2008-08-26.
- Julian Cribb (1998-06-26). "CSIRO Media Release: REVOLUTIONARY WOOL HARVESTING TAKES OFF". CSIRO. Retrieved on 2008-08-26.
- "Shearer sets records", ABC News Online (2007-03-06). Retrieved on 2008-08-26.
External links
- Golden Shears
- World Championship shearing
- Walter Bowen
- Wool Production (corporate site)
See also
| The above article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheep_shearing ). Modified by Apparel Search 8/28/08 |
