[ad_1]
Water wheels always appear in the dry season along streams in the northwestern region. The simple bamboo water wheel is associated with the traditional farming methods of ethnic minority groups in mountainous areas.
Water wheels are installed by hand by rivers and streams, where the water stream is lower than the field surface. The whole wheel is made of bamboo, tied with some stones to add weight for the wheel to turn around, taking water through the pipes to pour into the higher fields.
The water wheels are the highlights of terrace fields, which attract tourists as well.
The wheels save lots of human effort in watering the fields.
The Tày and Thái ethnic minority groups cannot remember when the water wheels were first used. They only know the wheels have been with them for generations.
The water wheels are familiar to people of all ages in the Tày and Thái communities.
People wash their clothes and bathe by the water wheels.
To give stability and steadiness to water wheels, locals use stones got from the streams to tie up in the wheel.
Thanks to media reports, the water wheels have become known throughout the country as a special feature of the northwestern region.
Many localities have added water wheels to tourist destinations.
The water wheels attract both domestic and foreign tourists to the localities where visitors can experience local delicacies like baked fish from streams, sticky riced raised in mountainous fields and salad made from moss on the rocks. — VNS
[ad_2]
Source link