Fun with Math: 17 horses, a pony and a will
Here's a fun math trick that my dad taught me when I was a little boy...
Farmer Brown owned seventeen horses and he dearly loved each and every one of them.
In his will he instructed that upon his death the horses should be distributed to his sons as follows:
The eldest son was to receive 1/2 of the horses.
The middle son was to receive 1/3 of the horses.
The youngest son was to receive 1/9 of the horses.
After Farmer Brown passed away, the executor of his will took the three sons out to the pasture field to distribute the horses according to their father's wishes.
After the sons had rounded up and corralled the horses the executor began reading the will.
Unfortunately, he quickly realized he had a serious problem...
Since there were 17 horses there was no way to distribute them as directed by the will and make the math work as intended.
The four men stood there for several minutes trying to come up with a solution to the problem.
All of a sudden they saw a young boy coming down the road on a pony. That gave the executor an idea. He yelled and asked the boy if he'd be willing to help him out of a jam.
The boy said he'd be happy to help out so they opened the gate and let him bring the pony into the pasture field.
After they had placed the pony in the corral with the horses, that made a grand total of 18 animals. The executor got right to work...
First, he gave the oldest son his nine horses (i.e. 1/2 of 18).
Next, he gave the middle son six horses (1/3 of 18).
And finally, he gave the youngest son two horses (1/9 of 18).
After the task was finished everyone saw that the 17 horses had been distributed exactly as Farmer Brown had wanted all along.
After all, 9+6+2=17, right?
They no longer needed the boy's pony so they thanked him and sent him on his way.
See, math really can be fun!
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