Imperial weights and measures - know some of them but not all:
pound - something to do with the size of stones used to pound the wheatears to remove the grain prior to milling, I think
stone - the largest stone in the process - 14 pounders were roughly the equivalent in weight of the larger stone
Funny how so many of these have something to do with agriculture, like...
yard - something to do with the length of the step ('foot' is the average foot size and a step or yard is three of those) - not sure more than that - there's a yardstick, being a standard measure of the step, but not sure why it's called that - then there are 22 yards (steps) to a chain...
chain - the length of the chain from the plough to the horse's 'collar' or yoke, and there are 10 chains to a furlong (links to the yard when one imagines the ploughman walking behind...)
furlong - literally a 'furrow long' - the length of the furrow in a ploughed field, obviously 220 yards, and then there are 8 furlongs to a mile (1760 yards)...
All quite logical in a rural sort of way....
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Always sufficient hills - never sufficient gears
Last edited by Cyclefrance; 10-31-2005 at 11:00 AM.
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