David Livingston wrote: where are you going to get two other people to help you with these guys when ever you need them . In the UK whole villages used to share a team of oxen to do the ploughing with man power to match , oxen died out after the enclosures when farming became a more solo effort .
Yeah, the UK is a bit like that - when I was trying to train small farm horses there, it was virtually impossible to find small, one-horse ploughs as the culture seemed to demand a pair of very large heavy horses as a bare minimum. When I got to Portugal, it was pretty easy to pick up small, lightweight equipment suitable for use by one not-very-large donkey.
I've never worked with oxen, but I did stumble on these guys last week.
These are a
landrace known as
Arouquesa from Arouca in Portugal. They are triple purpose, for
milk, meat and work. Which probably explains why I got away with approaching this close to them. I'm generally pretty nervous about approaching any bull, let alone a finely built one that suggests it's a
dairy breed. These guys seemed pretty placid, but I decided this was close
enough as the girl in background had noticed me and I didn't want to attract the attention of that boy in the front. His horns look kinda spiky and I bet he can run faster than I can!
From googling images of oxen working in Portugal, it appears as though working them in pairs is normal, and likely just with one handler. I can certainly see the attraction of using oxen if I was raising my own just to work the
land. It would certainly save having to keep different types of animal for different purposes.
Image found
here