Stooks
by Richard Reeve
Title
Stooks
Artist
Richard Reeve
Medium
Photograph - Photograph
Description
A stook, also referred to as a shock, is a circular or rounded arrangement of swathes of cut grain stalks placed on the ground in a field. Typically sheaves of grains such as wheat, barley and oats may be 'stooked' so they are ready for threshing.
In England a stook may also particularly refer to twelve sheaves. In North America, a stook also refers to a stack of six, ten or fifteen bales of hay or straw (the small square bales, 70-90 lb (30-40 kg) each, that can picked up by a person), stacked in the field. The bales are stacked and deposited by a "stooking machine" or "stooker" that is dragged, sled-like, behind the baler. The stooking sled has four, five, or six fingers that hold the bales until the stook is complete. When the stook is complete the "stacker" steps on a lever to release the stook. The fingers drop to the ground and the finished stook slides off the fingers. The sled resets itself and is ready to be filled again. The bales are stacked on the diagonal to shed the rain and to minimize acquiring moisture from the ground before being picked up.
An automatic bale stooker was eventually designed to eliminate the need for a person to manually stack and trip the stook-release. The automatic stooker is positioned behind the baler and collects released bales and sends them up an inclined shute. The bale falls through a series of bars into the "3-2-1" configuration. Once all six bales are in position the platform trips, drops the stook in the field, and automatically returns to the loading position. Allied produced a model of stooked in the 1980s that can still be found across the countryside in Canada today.
The purpose of these practices is to protect unthreshed grain, hay or straw from moisture until it can be picked up and brought into long-term storage. The unthreshed grain also cures while in a stook.
A stook may also have a general meaning of 'bundle' or 'heap' applicable to items other than sheaves or bales.
I took this shot back in the mid 1980s when I was working on farms in England and thought it would look good with an antiqued finish.
Featured group Images
Amateur Photographers - 12/06/2014
Uploaded
December 6th, 2014
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Comments (2)
John Turner
A great shot and a good read to boot L/F
Richard Reeve replied:
Thank you, John. This is from nearly 30 years ago, yet seems like yesterday in some ways...
Meg Shearer
I'd never heard this term. And this is a wonderful shot! Great tones too! L/F!
Richard Reeve replied:
I think it's British thing. I heard it used years ago, but had never heard the US equivalent, shock.