harvesting

Harvesting

Two married women tie the wheat to their mule. They are very exhausted from cutting their crops all day. In my area it is socially unacceptable for men to cut crops. As a result, women’s burden in my hometown is heavier compared with other places.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

The woman has nine family members who she supports by herself. On this day she got up at six in the morning and came to the fields to harvest the crops. Hand sickles like the one she uses are usually bought from the county town.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

A group threshes crops on the family’s threshing ground. These people are all members of the same extended family. Usually boys and men have to put the wheat into the machine and girls and women carry the sheaves and sweep the straw away.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

Women cut a small handful of wheat at a time. This is then placed on the ground in a line. A group of handfuls are tied together with a simple knot of wheat stalk, and the bundle is then ready for transportation back to the threshing ground.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

Four village women cut and tie their wheat. The method of tying, transporting and drying wheat in my hometown is different compared to other areas. We move our wheat the same day that it is harvested, as you can see from these images.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

After school boys tie the wheat onto the donkeys and mules, the little girl (seen in the corner) will drive the laden animals back to her home, which is about two kilometers away.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

In my village the landscape is quite hilly and the roads are not very good. Thus, we use animals for transport rather than tractors. We must move our bundles of tied wheat to the family’s threshing ground before stacking them for three days to dry. After this the grain is threshed.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

My cousin, Rekshie Drolma (left) is a middle school girl. Her mother got stomach cancer and passed away last winter. She abandoned her study and has since worked in her family’s fields. She is also the main carer for her seventy year-old grandmother. The boy in the foreground is Tashi, her brother.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

Two sisters help with the harvest. Their sister-in-law recently passed away, so they came to their brother’s family to help harvest in addition to doing their usual chores. They got up early in the morning and cut the crops quickly.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso

Harvesting

This photo shows me adding to the pile of straw that we save after threshing our crops. During the winter families need to feed their animals with this straw. The straw is also used as fuel for cooking, so people treat it as a precious commodity.

Photographer: 
Pagmotso