Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Communications Technology

Draft Horses Are Helping Upgrade Cell Towers In Wisconsin (npr.org) 96

Companies that provide cell phone service are constantly racing to provide the most reliable signal. In Wisconsin, one of the providers has turned to a surprising option to get the job done: draft horses. From a report on NPR: The horses are helping U.S. Cellular upgrade equipment on about 200 cell towers in Wisconsin, some of which are served by hard-to-navigate access roads. "We call them roads. They're more of a path," says Brandi Vandenberg, the company's regional planning manager for engineering. "So when you don't have a firm structure to travel on, any type of inclement weather can make it a challenge." Wisconsin's deep snow and heavy rains can make the access roads all but impassable for trucks. Vandenberg says with construction planned at so many tower sites, the company has a tight timetable for delivering equipment and scheduling technicians to install it. Jason Agathen, a driver for CH Coakley, the logistics company hired to coordinate the tower upgrades, knows how tricky the access roads can be. Agathen has delivered thousands of pounds of electronics gear to the cell tower sites. One trip, he says, involved snow so deep it blew the transmission on an ATV. So the company hired farmer Jason Julian of Medford, Wisc., and his draft horses to keep the tower upgrades on track.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Draft Horses Are Helping Upgrade Cell Towers In Wisconsin

Comments Filter:
  • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @12:05PM (#54393105) Homepage Journal
    I've heard of a horse....

    But what is a "draft" horse?

    • by Snard ( 61584 ) <mike,shawaluk&gmail,com> on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @12:08PM (#54393127) Homepage
      It's the status of the horse until it is approved, at which time it becomes a final horse.
    • by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @12:09PM (#54393143) Journal
      RTFA will set you free-

      Julian uses draft horses to do much of the work on his organic dairy farm and for a horse logging business during the winter. His Belgian Brabant are the type of working horses that were common on Wisconsin farms before motor vehicles took over much of their work.
      "They're short-backed, heavily muscled. They're easy keepers, very calm-minded, very easy horses to be around. Very easy horses to train," he says.

      • RTFA will set you free-

        Read the article? You must be new here...

        ;)

    • by will_die ( 586523 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @12:14PM (#54393185) Homepage
      They are large horses used for work, primary farm, hauling, etc. the most common example are clydesdales.
      • They are large horses used for work, primary farm, hauling, etc. the most common example are clydesdales.

        Clydesdales may be the most common example, but the most common breed is the Belgian Brabant. As it happens, that's the breed being used for the work in Wisconsin. Clydesdales are the second most common.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @12:21PM (#54393259) Homepage Journal

      The following terms are all etymologically related:

      Draftsman -- someone who illustrates.

      Draft horse -- a plow horse.

      Draft beer -- beer on tap.

      These all descend from the the Old English dræht, meaning to pull or drag. A draftsman drags a pen across the page. A draft horse pulls a plow. You draw a pint from the tap.

      • by mjwx ( 966435 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @02:06PM (#54394259)

        Draft beer -- beer on tap.

        These all descend from the the Old English dræht, meaning to pull or drag. A draftsman drags a pen across the page. A draft horse pulls a plow. You draw a pint from the tap.

        Sorry, but I have to be pedantic, in correct English (En-GB), it's spelled draught beer.

        Your entomology is mostly correct, the draught part comes from an old English word meaning pull, this refers to the way a keg beer is poured by pumping the handle in long pulls as its a mechanical pump rather than an electric one as seen in modern pubs. English pubs still carry the traditional draught taps for serving real ale.

        • by Shatrat ( 855151 )

          Sorry, but I have to be pedantic. In correct English (En-USA), it's spelled etymology. Also beer is not dispensed with electricity. It's dispensed with pressurized CO2, with the exception of Beer Engines which are pumps and getting rare even in the UK from my understanding.

          • "Beer Engines which are pumps and getting rare even in the UK from my understanding"

            Fortunately you've been misinformed, most pubs have at least one or two ales on tap*, and new beer engines are manufactured and sold [cfbsonline.co.uk].
            * A choice of beer, a lager or a cider is the bare minimum for a self respecting pub

        • Your entomology is mostly correct, the draught part comes from an old English word meaning pull, this refers to the way a keg beer is poured by pumping the handle in long pulls as its a mechanical pump rather than an electric one as seen in modern pubs. English pubs still carry the traditional draught taps for serving real ale.

          Olig. https://www.xkcd.com/1012/ [xkcd.com]

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Sorry to be pedantic in return, but you aren't talking about "correct English", but rather English orthography, which assumed roughly its current form when the English court switched from Norman French to English (with a brief detour into German). That was before a number of major pronunciation changes, among other things before the Great Vowel Shift (1400 AD - 1600 AD). American orthography was subsequently reformed (partially) to reflect Modern English pronunciation, but Britain retained the pointlessly

          • Good post, it caused me to go down the rat-hole of linquistics for a bit. I checked out the GVS because I've always been a little fascinated with the arcane spellings/pronunciations of English. The google article on GVS was informative on the how but not on the why.

            On another tangent, I would imagine that the invention vocal recordings from the late 1800's on have dramatically slowed pronunciation shifts.

      • Draft beer 3rd??? it's Wisconsin

    • But what is a "draft" horse?

      Straight up? Or on the rocks?

      And the horses on my ranch are just plain daft, and what is on third base, and on any horse at all.

    • Look at a Budweiser TV commercial. The Clydesdale is a breed of draft horse. Bread for pulling things.

    • That's one that didn't want to join the Army but had to.

    • Why do people post these responses just to prove they didn't know something? Something they could have, with a moment on Google, found for themselves?

      Is it to try and demonstrate the item being referenced was somehow intentionally obtuse? It was not.

      God forbid TFA referred to them as 'draught horses'.

      • "God forbid TFA referred to them as 'draught horses'."

        Er, do you mean a period of below-average horses in a given region, resulting in prolonged shortages in its horse supply? /jk

        Yah, my first thought was "what, you can't select:right-click:search google"? Then I quickly figured he was trollin' just to be a smart-ass, so, whatever.

        But take a look at some of the responses! If one has at least a casual interest in Languages, some of the responses are quite entertaining/educational.

        So, I give it a pass.

    • It's a horse that's bred and trained to pull a load rather than be ridden with a saddle.
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      I've heard of a horse....

      But what is a "draft" horse?

      When you're at the pub, if you don't want a bottled horse you order a draft horse.

    • I've heard of a horse....

      But what is a "draft" horse?

      The original All Terrain Vehicle.

    • I've heard of a horse....

      But what is a "draft" horse?

      It's what came before "bottled horse" was invented.

    • Nice troll. I mean that in a good way. You got mostly considerate or considered responses.

      Kumbaya, y'all

  • An old low-tech solution works best in some situations.

    Just don't tell that to anyone who works in government or military procurement.

    • the US military uses pack animals in Afghanistan. mules, horses, etc.
    • by myrdos2 ( 989497 )

      I wonder... I doubt horses would be any better than a Bombardier [rackcdn.com]. Seems like more of a PR stunt to me.

      • by Higaran ( 835598 )
        It probably comes down to the cost factor, the horse guy is a contractor, and the company doing the upgrades is probably a contractor as well. No one cares about how the freight gets there, and no one wants to buy expensive equipment that they need for only a few jobs. Realistically, they would need to drive this thing on a trailer behind the delivery truck to all the jobs to get the freight to the site. Once the jobs are over then they'd be stuck with a machine that they'd probably never use again, so i
    • by Falos ( 2905315 )

      If I wanted to be pedantic about "best", a blank check could get you [better] ATVs, helicopters, jetpacks, whatever.

      But no, this seems like a fine response. Especially if they're reasonable and not assholes about >tight timetable never mind.

    • An old low-tech solution works best in some situations.

      Don't kid yourself. They're using draft horses because draft horses won't unionize.

  • They didn't need a special horse permit? No special government worksite inspections? No mandatory ASPCA representation on site to prevent abuse? No need to submit a permit change or get government waivers? Didn't the farmer have to get a specific number of hours of training, pass a certification test, and join the union?

    Are you sure it wasn't Somalia? The lack of regulation is horrific.

    That kind of problem solving would never be allowed in a blue state.

    • They didn't need a special horse permit? No special government worksite inspections? No mandatory ASPCA representation on site to prevent abuse? No need to submit a permit change or get government waivers? Didn't the farmer have to get a specific number of hours of training, pass a certification test, and join the union?

      Indeed, this looks troubling, but have no fear....

      "Hello, I'm from the government, and I'm here to help you!!"

    • did they not get a climate change permit from EPA to allow the horses to break wind whilst pulling the loads?
    • by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @01:29PM (#54393871) Homepage Journal

      There are few reasons for a farmer who relies on his draft horses to abuse them. While non-union workers are plentiful in many cases, good horses may not be.

      They need fewer regulations than you might think.

    • by hackel ( 10452 )

      Your deplorableness is leaking.

  • I have heard of the famous Alamo Draft Horse...
  • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Wednesday May 10, 2017 @12:20PM (#54393255)

    When I was an adolescent we had ATVs to ride, and it was common to ride the rural powerline maintenance "roads". These were little more than two-track ruts that followed the path that the power lines took, and for those few times we saw maintenance trucks out there, they were always 4x4 or 6x6 and specially built for the application.

    Even the municipal radio towers for city services used 4x4s, they had an older '90 or so Dodge Ramcharger that had upgraded transfer case and differentials for climbing to the top of the various buttes and mountains to allow a technician to service the radio equipment. A friend of mine ended up buying it after they surplused it, makes for a nice offroad rig.

    It's no surprise that in even worse terrain they'd resort to animals, as lacking drive wheels the animals can cross terrain that would thwart wheeled or tracked vehicles without entirely destroying it in the process. So long as they don't need heavy equipment for what they're doing then it's probably cheap. I expect even helicopters would cost more.

    • by OhPlz ( 168413 )

      Sounds similar to companies using goats to clear overgrowth. The power companies do that occasionally for areas that are too difficult to clear by machine.

  • As I recall, a shortage of draft horses due to casualties caused many problems with German logistics in WWII
  • So he doesn't know how to operate an ATV, don't blame your fail on the equipment.
  • That's why my unit sales of buggy whips just took off with that infinite sales increase over last year... I KNEW this factory was a good investment!

  • Call Scott Walker! Bring in Paul Ryan! These horses are taking away AMERICAN JOBS! We must put a stop to it. Not only that, but these freeloading horses just eat all our food and don't even pay any taxes! Time to stand up and fight for the American middle class! We need to build a great wall around Wisconsin...a pen, if you will...and keep these horses OUT!

    • Can't even use good, American horses to do this. What's that? American horses won't do this job? I bet they're willing to try! No need for H1B horses to take jobs away from American horses!
  • Back in the distant "pre internet" history, my company was hired to erect a 50' radio repeater tower on
    a national forest-surrounded peak near June Lake California.
    All of the parts, including concrete mix and the water to make it with, was carried to the
    site on a pack train. 6 mules, 3 horses, and about 20 trips altogether.

    Ah, the good old days :-)

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

Working...