Museum of Military and Labor Glory (Saratov). Part 7.

So we have finished looking at the military component of this museum. But here, unlike the vast majority of similar sites, sufficient attention is also given to labor valor.

Given the specific nature of the surrounding terrain (steppe), this is agriculture. And its main driving force is tractors.

And we will begin with the classic iron horse – the hero of the first five-year plans of Soviet power.

There are two of them here.

A pair of their wheeled descendants with rubber tires.

And the crowning glory of the direction is the wheeled giant K-700.

It is not always possible to drive through our fields on wheels, so we also have tracked tractors.

It goes without saying that they don’t just drive across the fields, but drag some kind of towing devices.

The range of which is large and varied.

Nevertheless, the real horses were not left out.

There are also some truly monstrous trailers.

So much so that it is easier to firmly merge them with a tractor, obtaining the next class of agricultural machinery – a combine harvester.

The equipment was made with “care” for the Soviet peasant. (Sarcasm, by the way.)

It’s good that at least they thought to make a covered cabin in the next modification.

Accordingly, the results of the activity must be removed from under all this equipment.

If I were their parents, I would sometimes turn on my brain,

and he didn’t allow children to climb into really scary places.

It even looks creepy in the photo!

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