Mechanical Method:
- bundles of henequen pencas,
or leaves, tied with henequen twine, are loaded onto trucks (pulled by mules on
little iron tracks traditionally called "decovilles" since they stamped with the
name of the town in France where they were made)
- trucks deliver the pencas
to the milling factory or desfibradora by trucks
- bundles are unloaded at the base of
a vertical conveyor
- at the top of the conveyor, workers
stand on raised benches, untie the bundles, placing the twine over a wooden bar to be
reused
- pencas are conveyed down a
large, shiny, brass chain to two drums that crush the leaves and beat the pulp while water
is sprayed over them; then the pencas are flipped over and crushed, beaten and
sprayed again (the pulp residue, bagasso, falls through the pressing area
into bins that look like little dump trucks; when they are full, little mules pull these
bins out to fallow areas where it is dumped to dry; it can be used as mulch; below the
beating area, known as the decordicator, are little canals for carrying off the pulpy
water; the smell is not pleasant)
- when the remaining tough long fibers
emerge from the other side, workers separate the fibers into handsize bundles, slide them
down either a pipe or smooth wooden beam where they are placed on truks
- truks are then pulled by
little mules over the narrow tracks to the drying field (Drying fields are
surrounded by stone walls to protect this precious commodity from fires)
- The fiber dries in only a few hours (To
preserve its clean white color it should not get wet)
- The fiber is brought back to the
factory storerooms where it is then pressed into huge bales held together with henequen
twine
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