Sunday, 14 April 2019

Harvesting

1980: Wildlife (Artist - Wendy Walsh: Graphics and text Peter Wildbur)
Its Spring and hares are out in the open looking for a mate and perhaps, if lucky, one might see a hare like this but make a motion and its off at high speed.  Like the hare I'm speeding but through the year to harvest time
1916-20: Harvesters (Design - Ödön Tull)
and the wheat fields of Hungary.  Ödön Tull (1870-1911) had won a Hungarian stamp design competition in 1909 which resulted in the issue of what is considered today a classic stamp unfortunately by the time of the first issue Tull had died. I leave the pastoral scene and journey to
1946: Re-conversion to Peacetime (Design - Herman Herbert Schwartz; Engraver - Silas Robert Allen)
the Canadian prairies as a combined harvester reaping and threshing the wheat speeds up the harvesting process considerably.
1950: Airmail (Design - Zoltán Nagy)
I like this Hungarian airmail set which combines fields, factories and transport (see here) so I'll thrown in a tractor as well as a combined harvester.
1955: Workers
not forgetting the tractor drivers
1989: Centenary of the Agricultural Museum (Design - B Bonfils; Engraver - A Kühlmann)
this chap even has time to smoke his pipe. The mighty machine is a steam tractor from 1917 and in the distance can be seen a sight more common in 1917 of a horse drawn plow
1994: The Red Cross: Finnish Horses (Design - P Vahtero)
you cannot operate that sitting down.
1961: Definitives (Agriculture and Art)
although it looks as though neither can you on this combined harvester working in a rice field. After all this work a refreshing cold beer might be on the menu perhaps made from hops from one of the world's major growers, Germany.
1998: 1100 Years of Hop Cultivation in Germany (Design - Steiner)
Here they are harvesting the hops, today of course there is a machine that does this but not as scenically as the workers on the stamp.


The Sunday Stamps prompt this week is the Letter H - here for Hungary, Harvest, Hare, Horses and Hops - hare over for more at See It On A Postcard







3 comments:

Ana said...

funny, a bunny or a rabbit would always cross my mind for the corresponding letters, but totally missed the Hare :)))

A woman, a tractor driver - now that is not something you see very often. Great to see it portrayed on a stamp!
And you are right, a machine harvesting the crops would never be as scenic as the workers on that stamp! Lovely!

Mail Adventures said...

Great selection. My favourite stamps would be the woman driving a tractor and also the harvest of hops. There are places when people still do that by hand. Then the beer is more expensive, of course!

Bob Scotney said...

Love the hare. I had an article published in Irelands Own about this animal.