Before the rise of mechanized harvesting, the wheat harvest season in China felt interminably long. Year after year, it tested patience, endurance, and the human spirit. I remember vividly those monotonous, labor-intensive days, filled with dust, sweat, and the same recurring sound.
One image remains etched in my memory: a stone roller trailing behind a plodding animal, rotating slowly, endlessly. Accompanying it was the repetitive chorus of “gululu” and “ziniuniu”—grinding and squeaking, over and over, as if echoing eternity.
In those sweltering summers, the stone roller would press over every stalk of wheat, every single grain. It would circle the threshing ground thousands—tens of thousands—of times. For those years, during every harvest, the stone roller was the unquestioned protagonist of the season.
Let me introduce this old companion properly.
The stone roller—known locally as gunzi or luzhou—is a threshing tool hewn from solid bluestone. Shaped like a massive cylinder, it features two sunken eye-like pits at both ends, called “navel sockets,” where a wooden or iron frame is affixed. During harvest, oxen or mules would pull the frame, dragging the roller in slow, deliberate circles.
But its role was not limited to threshing. Before any harvesting began, the threshing grounds needed to be flattened and prepared—and here, the roller was indispensable.
Every household would begin by watering the threshing yard, then scattering a thin layer of wheat husk. Then came the stone roller, led by livestock, pressing and smoothing the uneven ground. Its function here resembled that of a modern road roller, bringing order to the chaos of dirt and stone.
Some rollers weighed several hundred pounds, forged from tough, wear-resistant granite or bluestone. Their surfaces bore deep vertical grooves, slanted ridges, or even rows of bumps—patterns designed to increase friction, to better strip grain from chaff. These etchings were not decorative; they were the soul of efficiency.
Threshing began with the “field laying”—a thick blanket of harvested crops such as wheat, beans, or rice laid evenly across the yard. Then the frame would be assembled, livestock hitched, and the stone roller brought into action.
Later came tractors. The roller was chained behind a four-wheel diesel machine. Efficiency soared, but so did the noise. The rhythmic murmur of animals and the soft grind of stone were replaced by the deafening “tuang tuang tuang” of diesel engines. The threshing yard, once a symphony of wooden creaks and earthy moans, became an industrial battlefield.
Afternoons passed in that roaring soundscape. If the tractor suddenly stalled, silence descended like a blessing.
Yet no matter the era—be it livestock or machine—the stone roller remained a silent workhorse. Year after year, its tireless revolutions ushered in bounty and brought smiles to the faces of farmers. But at the height of celebration, few remembered it.
More often, it was a selfless companion. Under the scorching sun, amidst whirling dust and burning skies, as farmers sweated through each laborious hour, the roller rolled on—quiet, relentless, steady.
It was both a witness and participant in every harvest. Wherever it passed, golden grains spilled like treasure—plump beans, ripe rice, shimmering wheat. Its heavy body, though mute, was tied directly to the very notion of abundance.
To children, it was something else entirely—a plaything. In idle seasons, the roller would be dragged to a corner of the yard. Young kids would clamber atop, riding it like a mighty steed. Older ones challenged each other—who could push it farther, who could tip it upright. Sometimes it served as a fortress in games of hide-and-seek or tag. I remember we had more than one roller at home. One old roller, in particular, had been worn so smooth that it gleamed in the sun. Its navel pits were deeply grooved from decades of toil. Every summer, we played around it.
With the spread of threshing machines and combine harvesters in the late 1990s, the stone roller slowly vanished from sight. Most were abandoned—left at the edges of threshing grounds, beside dried-out ditches, behind crumbling walls. Some were dumped into ponds. Others were smashed and repurposed as roadbed gravel.
But sometimes, when I return to the countryside, I still see one. And when I do, something stirs. Forgotten memories awaken.
Because the stone roller is not just a piece of stone. It is the weight of the earth. It is the turning of the seasons. It lies quietly in the folds of time, reminding us to remember our roots—to honor the land and to cherish those who labored in silence, who asked for nothing in return, and gave us everything.
It is a relic, yes—but also a witness, a teacher, and a monument to a way of life that shaped generations. And as long as one stone roller remains, the heartbeat of that past continues to echo.