On other day, I wrote about the harvester that harvest on my brother's rice field. However, they left some rice plant that has not yet turned yellow, so my sister-in-law waited until it did before harvesting.
She used the reap tool to harvest first. and put it in a sack. Since our house was closer than theirs, she was able to fit all six sacks and bring them to the house, where she only used her feet to thres the rice.
Her eldest son was ordered to pick up the sacks of rice to bring to the house. They were light and not heavy.
The rice inside of the sacks.
She started to wash the rice on the trapal; she only put as much rice as her two feet could handle, rolling it until all the grains feel onto the trapal.
After she checks if all the grains have fallen, she will pick up the rice straws and put all the grains in the sack and pick up more rice to grind using her feet. This goes back and forth until all six sacks are finished.
the rice grains in the trapal after getting the rice straws.
I'm not sure what type of rice this is, hehe, but there's a lot of empty rice that needs to be thrown away with the wind.
Then my sister-in-law waited in the strong wind so that her rice grains would be clean and the empty rice grains would disappear.
This is completely clean. She is alone because her children are working on school projects and my brother is doing something in the rice fields. She just finishes quickly because she is used to it. Because I was young at the time, we harvested when they were not planting rice seeds. What grows naturally in the rice straw in the field is what we harvest.
I liked that my sister-in-law put rice straws here because they are good fertilizer for plants when they decompose.
That's all for today, I just want to say thank you for your unwavering support of my post. Peace and love. π«Άπ»