pennsylvania amish farmer and horses work fields

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Pennsylvania Amish farmer and horses work fields Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Farmer Plowing the Fields Royalty Free Stock Photo
View of An Amish Man Plowing Fields with 8 Horses Royalty Free Stock Photo
View of An Amish Man Plowing Fields with 4 Horses Royalty Free Stock Photo
Pennsylvania Amish farmer and horses work fields
6 Horses Pulling Antique Amish Liquid Manure Tank to Fertilize the Fields Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
An Amish Man Working the Fields Controlling 2 Horses With 5 of His Children Royalty Free Stock Photo
An Amish Man Working the Fields Controlling 2 Horses With 5 of His Children Royalty Free Stock Photo
Amish Boy Plowing the Field with 5 Horses Pulling Plow to Turn Over Fields to get Ready for Planting Royalty Free Stock Photo
The Amish do not use tractors or other machines in their fields. Instead, they rely on a draft horse or a team of draft horses to pull plows and other farm equipment. The most common draft-horse breeds are the Percheron and the Belgian draft horse. Both are powerful, hardworking, docile breeds. In Pennsylvania, donkeys sometimes are bred to Belgians, with the resulting foal being a strong, large mule popular with the Amish in the Lancaster County area. Main crops raised by Amish in Lancaster County, in order of acreage, are corn, hay, wheat, tobacco, soybeans, barley, potatoes, and other vegetables. Farmers also grow various grasses for grazing. Corn, grain, and hay crops usually stay on the farm for feeding livestock. Tobacco, potatoes, some grain and hay plus vegetables are raised for marketing. Farming is done with horse-drawn equipment with metal wheels, no rubber tires.”


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