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Powerful and magnificent, the Percheron horses kick up a haze of dust as they pull the heavy plough across a field.
The nostalgic scene could come straight from the pages of a history book. Or perhaps a modern sideshow to demonstrate the methods of a bygone age.
Yet this is just an ordinary working day for farmer Robert Sampson – who has chosen to ditch machinery to stay true to the traditional ways his family have used for five generations.
His beasts of burden may not be as fast as a tractor, but Mr Sampson believes they do a reliable – and often better – job.
And such is his enthusiasm for the old methods, he didn’t even bother to fix a tractor he kept for occasional jobs such as trimming pastures when it broke down recently.
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So now his four strapping Percheron horses do all the work.
The 56-year-old farmer takes them out each day to plough and roll the ground, to sow crops and to turn hay on his 265-acre farm in Hampshire.
But his determination to remain loyal to the old ways brings its challenges.
Horse-drawn ploughs can no longer be bought, so Mr Sampson has had to convert all the machinery himself from equipment designed to be pulled by tractor.
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Hardworking: Although it takes him three times as long to till the land as it would with a tractor Robert maintains the economic benefits as well as his enjoyment more than make up for the slightly slower progress
The Sampson family has owned Harbridge Farm, near Ringwood, since 1882, and it has always had working horses.
‘My father never fully mechanised the farm and we used horses in conjunction with tractors,’ Mr Sampson said.
‘Using horses is slow but for some jobs they are better, such as rolling crops, because the machine works better if you do it slowly.
‘We have 265 acres of land and they work on anything and everything.
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source: dailymail