Ad
related to: draught animal carts for small people with glass wheels for sale
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Horse and cart at Beamish Museum (England, 2013) Dockworkers and hand cart (Haiti, 2006). A cart or dray (Australia and New Zealand [1]) is a vehicle designed for transport, using two wheels and normally pulled by draught animals such as horses, donkeys, mules and oxen, or even smaller animals such as goats or large dogs.
Heavy wagons, carts and agricultural implements can also be pulled by other large draught animals such as oxen, water buffalo, yaks or even camels and elephants. Vehicles pulled by one animal (or by animals in a single file) have two shafts that attach either side of the rearmost animal (the wheel animal or wheeler).
The largest and heaviest types would be carried by draught animals. Lady in a litter being carried by her slaves, province of São Paulo in Brazil , c. 1860 Another form, commonly called a sedan chair , consists of a chair or windowed cabin suitable for a single occupant, also carried by at least two porters, one in front and one behind, using ...
The oldest wooden wheels usable for transport were found in southern Russia and dated to 3325 ± 125 BC. [1] Evidence of wheeled vehicles appears from the mid-4th millennium BC, between the North Sea and Mesopotamia [citation needed]. The earliest vehicles may have been ox carts. [2] Indian people with their bullock carts c. the early 1900s.
Carts pulled by a single dog were sometimes used by peddlers. Dogs were used as draught animals during the World War I to pull small field guns. Dogs were used by the Soviet Army in World War II to pull carts containing a stretcher for wounded soldiers. The modern-day sport of carting is an
Retired veterinarian, Dr. Lincoln Parkes, has dedicated more than 60 years to building custom-made carts for paralyzed animals. At 92-years-old, Dr. Parkes has helped hundreds of animals ...
This page was last edited on 14 November 2024, at 20:14 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Danish company Garia produces high-end, road legal golf carts that cost upwards of $20,000.