unlimited food supplies for your horse* *well at least you get free hay for your hay *joke*
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The cast of Honda Pro Ski Tour - 2007 includes: Amber Hay as Ski Tour Girl
Horse hay is really just grass that has been mowed and bundled. It often has the same bugs living in it that were in it while it was growing. Many bugs will also burrow their way into bales of hay and set up housekeeping there.
alfeda hay is for pregnant GP ad growing babies
a huge, cheap, work force was needed to grow it.NovaNETThere is no problem with growing cash crops that I am aware of. Hay is a cash crop I grow.
If you are "pro slavery" you like slavery! that is all
Yes, the hay can be worked into the soil to add organic matter. Just make sure it doesn't have seeds, or you'll end up growing more than you expected.
The price of hay will vary from farm to farm.This is due to the use of different fertilizers, growing techniques, irrigation and many other factors. It would be best to consult with a local Agricultural Extension Agency about what types of hay tend to go for what kind of prices in your area as the price will also be affect by the type of hay.
The University of Tennessee and other field tests show Bermuda is the fastest growing turf grass (for hay)
The best party planning apps for iPhone are Hay Day, Pro Party Planner, iParty, and Evite.
No. Hay is made of not just one type of grass or legume or grass-legume combination, but rather many possibilities of grass and legume cultivars and varieties and even more possible combinations of the variety of species, varieties and cultivars of grasses and/or legumes that are used in the production of hay. Quality also differs wildly in hay depending on growing conditions, when it was cut, when it was harvested, how it was stored, etc. If you sold your neighbor your hay and you got hay back from your neighbor, the hay you got from your neighbor, no matter if it's the same hay or not, will not be in the same condition, same forage combination, same shape as the hay you gave your own neighbor. Also the hay produced one year on your farm is never the same as the hay produced last year or the year before.
No. Grain should only be fed if a) you are wanting to finish them on grain for beef, or b) they are loosing weight and condition on hay, or if the hay is not adequate nutrition enough for lactating cows and/or growing cattle. If you're doing none of the above or your cows and growers are doing just fine on hay alone, then don't bother wasting your money on grain.