Farming rustic 

697 creative works found

  • A deserted farm cottage in rural ireland, whitewashed with a tatch roof. This is a really old farm cottage with a plow outside and storm clouds moving in.

  • stitched panorama

  • The invention of a horse drawn rake in the 1800’s made the process of collecting hay much more efficient. The horse drawn rake could collect about 8 times a much as someone raking by hand. This lead to more hay gathered to feed the stock and more time to do other chores,before winter set in.

  • A whole and a halved apricot against a black background

  • Old neglected barn with red doors.

  • Old farm wagon left abandoned in the snow.

  • / Megalithic grave in the background / reveals a very old farming tradition / in Karleby, south-western Sweden

  • An abandoned farmhouse SW Western Australia. / All I’ve got to do is try and find it again lol.

  • The Enloe-Floyd Barn is located at The Mountain Farm Museum on U.S. 441 adjacent to the National Park’s Oconaluftee Visitor Center, two miles north of Cherokee. The site is open year-round The barn is the only museum building original to the site. It was part of the Joseph Enloe farm. The Enloe house, built in the 1880s, stood on the site now occupied by the Oconaluftee Visitor Center. In 1917 the Enloes sold their farm to the Floyds, a neighboring family. When the museum opened, the barn was initially left on its original site, about 30 yards from the present-day Visitor Center. It was moved to its current location within the museum complex in 1960. Fifty feet wide and 60 feet long with a “shotgun” opening down the middle, the structure has several stalls and storage areas on each side of the long “hallway.” Upstairs there is a vast hayloft large enough to store a 2,500 square foot suburban home. Thought to be a “Drover’s barn” it is similar to the cantilevered barn in having a large, overhanging, frame loft for hay storage In this case, the loft is supported by log piers. This structure is much bigger than most barns, for it served as a “cattle hotel”, a place where farmers could stable their herds for a night as they drove them off the mountains to market

  • A hay rake drawn by horse came onto the scene in the 1800’s. This made the process of collecting hay much more efficient. The horse drawn rake could collect about 8 times a much as someone raking by hand. This lead to more hay gathered to feed the stock and more time to do other chores, before winter set in….Also pictured is a split-rail fence.

  • Buckingbong Station, Narrandera, New South Wales, Australia. This Station was a wonderful place to visit. Up past the tractor sheds, paddocks and enclosures was this wonderful find. I can just imagine thefantastic stories these old and well used things could tell. Taken with my Kodak Z8612 camera on the auto setting, thanks for visiting /

  • sepia toned version of a previous The corn crib at the Tipton place is an example of a double pen corn crib, larger than average, and having a driveway through the center. This not only provided a way to conveniently unload the wagon but allowed for extra air to flow through the crib. The hewn log sides were left with open spaces to allow air to circulate through the corn, both allowing it to dry initially and helping it to stay dry…The roofing is known as shakes, which are wooden shingles usually split from leftover parts of oak logs ….Behind the crib is the edge of a cantalever barn unique to this part of the country……This shot was taken on Cades Cove Loop Road in The Great Smoky Mountain National Park.

  • An old abandoned barn in a field at winter.

  • A shot in the spring after the trees had just started leafing out and the grass was getting greener.

  • “Home on the Range” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © A house on top of a bare hill looking out into the twilight. “How often at night / When the heavens were bright / By the light of the twinkling stars, / Have I stood here amazed / And asked as I gazed / If their glory exceeds that of ours. / The air is so clear, / The breeze so pure, / The zephyr so balmy and light; / I would not exchange / My home here on range / Forever in azure so bright.”

  • “Remember When” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © An old farmhouse overgrown with creepers. “Home is a place you grow up wanting to leave, / and grow old wanting to get back to.” / ~ John Ed Pearce

  • Image Collection for Jack’s Bee Farm Calendar This is a photograph of the last slave cabin still standing on our farm in Cave Spring. The cabin was one of several slave cabins on Slavery Row behind the main farmhouse. The fact that our ancestors once owned slaves is not something that we are proud of but it is a fact of our history here in the south. The last dairy worker that worked at Montgomery Dairy was Buck White, a direct descendant of the family that lived in the cabin on the left. The cabin on the right was the original cabin and the other was built later. There is solid wall with no door between the cabins. Buck White was born to freed slaves in this cabin and lived his entire life on the Montgomery farm. When he was little boy about 10 years old, my husband’s grandmother took him under her wing. She started the Montgomery Dairy in the1920’s during the Great Depression with only one milk cow. Buck was her only helper as her husband was still trying eek out a living by farming. When her milk business out-grew the farming business, Buck became the head dairyman and continued to work at the dairy until it closed in the 1970’s. When Buck was elderly and could no longer work around the farm, he continued to live in a rent-free house (not the cabin) on the farm until his death. Buck White was a beloved member of the Montgomery family his entire life. Location: Cave Spring, Georgia Thank you for stopping by to comment on this image. I don’t normally respond with individual thank-you comments due to time constraints (slow dial-up speed). I prefer to spend my limited time on RB by commenting on your work instead. However, I want you to know how much it means to me that you took the time to view and comment on my work! Patricia Please don’t copy or download this image. My photos may NOT be reproduced and/or used in any form without my written permission. If you want this photograph, I would be honored for you to purchase it. ©2008 Patricia Montgomery | Bucks Mountain Galleries | All rights reserved.

  • This may not look to be that comfortable to ride. It was a lot easier that raking hay by hand. This old horse drawn hay rake could rake bout what 8 men could do in a given time. That would leave a lot of time for other chores. More often then not, one of the younger kids would drive the rake, and the older kids and men would gather and put up the hay. This was pulled thru the field of cut hay. The tines would collect the hay. When they were full the lever would be pull releasing the hay in a pile. Then it would be gathered and taken to where they stored it. This may be crude by today’s standards but in its hay days this was a major improvement to putting up hay…….image taken at the Mountain Farm Museum at the Cherokee NC entrance to the Great smoky Mountain NP

  • This look into the past is preserved at the Mountain Farm Museum in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. This park is different in many ways from a lot of the other National Parks in the US. It is one of the 1st to have the land bought soley form logging companies and individuals. Somewhere in the neighborhood of 1200 familys were displaced in the early 1920’s and 30’s when they sold their land for the purpose of a National Park. The park service also desided they wanted to preserve the way of life of these early pioneers. Throughout the park old structures have been preserved. Here at the Mountain Farm Museum and at the Cades Cove Visitors Center are 2 places where a whole farm was preserved. The only building here that was originally here though, is the barn, the other structures were moved from various places in the park to here. Another note of the parks uniqueness is they is no charge for entering due to an agreement with the states of Tennessee and North Carolina

  • Nikon D70 / Applied Orton effect / Wa state

  • Taken in the town of Rome, PA on 01/31/2009 with a Canon 50D camera and very little editing in PS. Hand held, shot in raw converted to jpeg. /

  • One of the few images I can access at the moment due to hardware problems… This was shot last year on a cold wet winter’s day in the Strzelecki ranges. I love stumbling upon old rustic wrecks and relics and feel they can make great subjects. This one has obviously seen better days and in fact now has a tree growing up through the cab and where the windscreen once was. view this image large bubblesite / photography blog / portfolio Fuji G617, Velvia 50. / ©T.Middleton2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——

  • When I saw these red roses against an old farm shed, I thought I have to make an image of it. The contrast really stood out for me. Taken on top of Table Cape, Wynyard. / By an old farm shed , besides the road.

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