[VideoView]

Dr. Prof. Erika Hubatschek

The manure is applied by hand
video length:
01:49
interviewer:
Ruth Deutschmann
photography:
Benjamin Epp
copyright location:
Innsbruck
date of recording:
2008-08-22
???iuimd_video_v_zeit_zuordnung_en???:
1950
transcription:
In Sellrain I was even more frequently. This is the valley that goes from Innsbruck to the southwest. And that is very steep, there are always landslides, now this street is often blocked. The farmers there in my village, in Perfall, located high up, could not deploy the fertilizer normal, but have let him freeze in winter at the farm. In the spring they had him "klocken" then. They have it finely and grind all aufhacken need. And then he has been charged to a Astschleife. This is a device that had been in the stone age. Simple knots which are held together in front, and on which you hang up the estate, wants to carry the one, litter or fertilizer. They have interpreted the fertilizer, and then you pulled this Astschleife to where we have used the fertilizer. And there you have it sown by hand. I have pictures of it, that one can hardly imagine now. Now I go on a fertilizer spreader, and the splashing everywhere, which is effortless. At that time we had so much work. This is, of course, been necessary. If they had applied the normal way which is usually does, that one just hinauskarrt, and then sprinkling it with Kröhl or aufbreitet he was rolled down, because it is so steep. Then all the fertilizer down at the stream would have been, and in the meadows would not have been more. But these are all things that have emerged in the course of for centuries.