Then he stopped by the livestock dealer to buy a couple of chickens and a goose. |
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Several companies sell parasitic wasps for controlling flies in and around livestock buildings and feedlots. |
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The genetic engineering of livestock for human medical applications is known as pharming. |
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The emperor inspected the livestock and machinery, and was treated to a display of how the thresher worked. |
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The traditional farm buildings are located behind the farmhouse and include a bothy, stores, barn and livestock accommodation. |
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In keeping with the Heifer philosophy, loan repayments will go to buy livestock for farmers in Africa. |
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Maize and beet are widely grown in the Park by organic and non-organic farmers as livestock fodder crops. |
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Reduced tillage, crop rotations, and dispersed livestock all reduce energy needs and make more efficient use of renewable resources. |
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The locations of both urial and livestock were plotted on a map of the area. |
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The same giant livestock facilities that pollute our air and water are also the perfect breeding grounds for super-tough microbes. |
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The dogs, Anatolian shepherds, live with the livestock on the range and protect them from cheetahs and leopards. |
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The government took the initiative to send seed and livestock to these farms. |
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The livestock pens and barns held little interest for her, although she took the time to check out the horse barn, filled with stalls. |
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A small main house sat in front of a larger feed shed, a tool shed, and a pair of large barns emitting intermittent livestock noises. |
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This can happen when apples drop to the ground in an orchard and land in deer droppings or livestock manure. |
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The livestock contract has now been included as part of the lifeline ferry services which are currently out to tender. |
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In his younger years, he was principally involved in livestock haulage, leading stock into and out of the local markets. |
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To synchronize the conservation and the livestock development work, villagers are encouraged to carry out stall-feeding throughout the year. |
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The south-west of England is saturated with livestock farmers, and has about 15 to 20 per cent of Britain's livestock. |
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It has already contributed carbon credits through increased forestry and reduced livestock numbers. |
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Originally, kudzu was promoted in the 1800s as an erosion control and cheap livestock forage for the eastern and southern United States. |
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Although the movement restrictions are restricting business, farmers must use the livestock markets or risk losing them altogether. |
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Studies of livestock have found that the presence of avermectins slow the degradation of dung due to its harmful effects on dung insects. |
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Southward the land drops away to a vast plain suitable for livestock and plantation farming. |
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Solar-powered gates can be used at the end of residential driveways, on rural access roads, for livestock corrals, and in many other areas. |
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Windows were opened, livestock rustled in their barns, children's voices began to mingle with those of their parents. |
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We went into the woods and beat the trees with sticks until all manner of livestock stampeded out and were corralled into our barn. |
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It makes good sense, however, to include as many species as possible when legislating in order to control contagious livestock diseases. |
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One local resident blamed environmental groups who have large landholdings in the area for reducing livestock levels to encourage forest growth. |
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The public were reminded to keep to marked footpaths, keep dogs on leads around livestock and close gates. |
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Of the country's two and a half million people, nearly half remain nomadic livestock herders. |
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He runs an Aberdeen Angus herd near Skipton and sits on the West Riding National Farmers' Union's livestock committee. |
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The IFA leader said livestock marts cannot be expected to act as operatives for the Department of Agriculture. |
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She died from being trampled by a wagon cart livestock that was being shipped to the local butcher. |
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It is also used by a number of exporters in the Irish livestock industry who ship cattle on the hoof to Lebanon, Egypt and Europe. |
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Do not purchase stock from other farms or dealers while the ban on livestock mart sales remains in force. |
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It is a sting in the tail for livestock farmers who had welcomed DEFRA's decision to reduce the movement standstill from 20 days to six. |
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The nutritional significance of legumes to humans and livestock makes them especially important. |
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Corn prices nosedived because of an expected mass livestock slaughter programme in Europe. |
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This group includes Sugar Beets, grown for sugar extraction and mangel-wurzels, grown for livestock feed. |
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Similarly, after crops are harvested, livestock are allowed to browse on crop residues and trees in fields. |
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Individual producers are encouraged to take responsibility for the biosecurity of their livestock enterprises. |
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The report went on to note that livestock was collectivized without adequate preparation, and with no thought given to shelter or fodder. |
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They distributed 350 sheep to farmers living in high-altitude resettlements who lost their livestock during the conflict. |
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People paid me big bucks to come and train their kids how to properly show livestock at fairs and competitions. |
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The livestock marts got back to normal in the past week following the suspension of the dealers' action. |
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If farmers want their livestock to be protected then they should protect them in a more secure way. |
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For example, a new National Forest Code in 1827 restricted the entry of livestock to wooded areas. |
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From the point of view of European livestock farmers, soya is the ideal product. |
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A growing demand for goat meat among New York City Muslims has been a boon to a livestock auction tucked away in the middle of Amish country. |
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It inflicts a painful sting that is sometimes deadly to humans, as well as to young, unprotected livestock and wildlife. |
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She says the government needs to ban byproducts from cattle and similar animals from all livestock feed. |
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There have been frequent attacks on livestock too, with crocodiles waiting in ambush near the river bank. |
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He inherited a great love of the land and livestock and was a most industrious and hard-working gentleman. |
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Aside from causing pregnant cows to abort, this would threaten the state's brucellosis-free status, and hence its vital livestock industry. |
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If you have a sandy or clay type soil, amend it with well rotted livestock manure or aged compost. |
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No one knew in advance that feeding livestock rendered meat and bone meal would cause an epidemic of mad cow disease, but it did. |
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He was gifted when it came to matters relating to the soil and livestock and his instinctive knowledge was always put to good use. |
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This year some producers may benefit from using a drought-stressed grain crop for livestock forage. |
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The well-established tradition for farmers to take the livestock for sale to their local auction market is now under threat. |
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Their livestock consists of Hereford and Aberdeen Angus cattle and free-range hens. |
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This is when groups of from five to fifteen families set out with their livestock in search of green pasture. |
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The livestock population of over seven million head is also expected to plummet. |
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An innovative program that provides guard dogs to livestock farmers at a modest cost may be helping to save wild cheetahs in southern Africa. |
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We see livestock dotting the hillsides as we climb and I wonder what sort of doughty stoics would choose to farm such challenging country. |
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The decision to increase the discount has met with approval from the livestock sector. |
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I would have liked to see each member of the committee drive a livestock wagon for six months before making a report that will affect us all. |
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Organic livestock producers must not feed mammalian or poultry slaughter byproducts to mammals or poultry. |
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It is not feasible to provide an exhaustive list of the ingredients of either cattle cake or bovine livestock feeds. |
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Two of the reservoirs are fully fenced in, meaning that livestock are kept well away from the water. |
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Most of the stories are heroic epics where the batir and his trusty horse save the clan and its livestock from danger. |
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Buyers included Scandinavians, Americans and British who were converting the former livestock farms to game that traditionally roamed the region. |
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Furthermore, by inbreeding his livestock he fixed and exaggerated those traits he felt to be desirable. |
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People would bring cattle and other livestock from all around the area to be shipped out. |
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The amendments apply to livestock producers and farmers using livestock manure to fertilize crops. |
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Even today, across many remote areas of the United States, wind-powered pumps draw water from wells to fill livestock watering troughs. |
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In more arid regions, livestock production dominates with the raising of cattle, camels, sheep, and goats. |
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Typical examples of category 3 events would include horse racing, showjumping, greyhound racing and livestock shows. |
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Many insecticides used for livestock insect control are restricted for use in milking parlors and on lactating dairy cattle. |
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While innate livestock sense is bred into all good working collies, their working style can vary. |
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At school she is busy with FFA, competing in soil judging, parliamentary procedure and livestock judging teams. |
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House flies and stable flies are not only a nuisance on livestock and poultry farms, but they also transport disease-causing organisms. |
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Grain trading and livestock production in the US is monopolized by two of the world's largest grain traders. |
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Small embanked fields were laid out for cereal growing, and were separated from areas devoted to livestock pasturage. |
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The Tongas whose major occupation has been agriculture used livestock for tilling the land, getting milk for sale and home consumption. |
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Around the middle of the eighteenth century, the breeding of livestock was dramatically changed by Robert Bakewell, an English agriculturist. |
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The large livestock pens make provision for 850 cattle while the small stock pens can keep 500 sheep and goat. |
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His sources range from sidewalks and commercial buildings in town to barns, machine sheds, and livestock pens on farms. |
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The poor are poor because they have no assets like land, livestock or a fish pond. |
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He then sold all his livestock and replaced them with four breeds of pedigree cattle. |
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A total of twenty-one programmes were in operation with dairy processors, livestock marts and meat plants. |
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Every year, our community has a livestock fair, which JRH has found himself enjoying. |
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These movement restrictions apply to all farmed livestock within that area. |
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He has also asked livestock marts and factories to renew their disinfection procedures. |
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Whole villages were put to the sword, livestock was slaughtered, crops destroyed and famine and disease decimated the survivors. |
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Temporary rules restricting the movement of livestock have been made permanent, the Government announced yesterday. |
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He talked to a group of Canadian Forces reservists, visited the livestock barns and posed for several pictures. |
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A new addition to the livestock on show was the pygmy goat class, which attracted a lot of attention from the curious crowds. |
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In truth, foxes are not nearly as great a menace to livestock as the hunt clubs who hunt foxes with hounds. |
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Eventually the ghetto is closed and the remaining inhabitants are rounded up and crammed onto livestock carriages bound for the camps. |
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He took good care of his land and his livestock and was a sound judge of animals. |
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Also, she continues, weeds are fodder for livestock and a large source of leafy greens in a rural family's diet. |
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Until now the only way to enrich livestock with these fatty acids was to supplement their feed with expensive fish meal, Kang explains. |
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The livestock farmers have beef and pork and cheese and chicken and eggs and milk. |
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In addition to farming and livestock raising, the women at the VVF Centre have also acquired skills in making soap and petroleum jelly. |
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Speakers discussed the federally backed insurance program to help livestock producers reduce market risk. |
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This data reveals the thermal stress level of livestock and will be useful in managing cattle in feedlots. |
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High-protein soybean varieties may improve competitiveness of livestock producers. |
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Farmers with large livestock feedlots need to recycle voluminous quantities of manure by applying it to their fields as fertilizer. |
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He said a livestock market was a special case because it would not normally be built on an industrial park or in an area of housing. |
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Carbon dioxide is released through livestock respiration and manure decomposition, and by unvented heaters. |
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Farmers need a helping hand with assistance for the transport of fodder, livestock and water. |
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Heartwater is a tick-borne disease, which has been a scourge of South African livestock owners for over a hundred years. |
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This was achieved after improved park management contained the destructive annual fires and reduced livestock grazing and poaching. |
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In a stilt house, the shed under the living floor serves as shelter for livestock and storage for fodder. |
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The eagles were special, the livestock more ordinary but there was also the marmots the izards and the lizards. |
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The massive use of fertilizers and industrial fodder for livestock also contributed to the increase in productivity per head. |
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And every summer the threat to livestock increases as the plant comes into flower in its millions. |
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It follows that if you want an authentic border collie, you must get one that was bred for livestock work. |
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There's also a desperate need to help people have their livestock survive by getting fodder to them. |
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There are many livestock owners here, and all are not happy with authorities' foot-dragging in addressing our concerns. |
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The gateway facility could eventually include a livestock sales area, pens, parking, retail outlets and a food hall selling local produce. |
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The area where the cowsheds stand will become a forbidden area for poultry and livestock breeding. |
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The tenant risks poor performance or health of the livestock due to less forage and lower quality feed. |
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Be aware that the presence of livestock or game in your area will add to the chances of coydogs being nearby. |
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Our livestock buildings are becoming ever more crammed, ruling out species-specific animal husbandry. |
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Also, grazing that leaves very short stubble could lead to a greater risk of bloat if livestock are hungry when turned into the next paddock. |
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In 1911, the first dairy cows and other livestock arrived to become the nucleus of USDA's animal husbandry research activities. |
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Ironically, livestock herds had grown by as much as 50 percent in the years prior to the infestation. |
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This livestock disease is endemic in countries unable to afford intensive agriculture, yet has been absent from Europe for three decades. |
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The cargo and livestock vessel Contender has been sold to a shipping company in Dubai. |
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Polish farmers sell their produce and livestock to grain and oil mills, dairies, abattoirs, sugar refineries and starch factories. |
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Annual report statistics failed to identify fully all forms of livestock being shipped in stock cars. |
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Hill-slope enclosures may have been occupied by livestock herders who used the gaps between the ramparts to corral animals. |
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The idea is to move the livestock into bigger herds and move them around more. |
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A report published today by the pressure group Animal Aid claims that York livestock market mistreats its cattle. |
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The Navajo, for example, after obtaining livestock from the Spanish in the 1500s, became consummate shepherds and goat herders. |
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In the medium term, we only want to support those farmers who do not keep more than two livestock units per hectare. |
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Since the beginning of this year, some 1.3 million cheques have been issued to farmers under the various livestock headage and premium schemes. |
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Domestic donkeys interact well with other livestock animals such as horses, cows, goats, sheep, and llamas. |
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Some even choose to keep a handful of specialist livestock on a few hectares of land and either sell or lease the rest to full-time farmers. |
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Reports were taken on illegal taxation, in which villages were taxed either by headcounts on goats and sheep or by taking the livestock itself. |
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However, the mass transportation of livestock around the country will clearly have to be looked at. |
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The hugely controversial contiguous cull of livestock to combat the foot-and-mouth epidemic was stoutly defended by the Government. |
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Much of his collection deals with important livestock such as Holstein cattle and Yorkshire pigs. |
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All large packers were required to report prices paid for livestock, any movement of livestock and all meat to be exported. |
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You can lose livestock or fall short on harvest, but developing trade routes can help you survive these hardships. |
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Almost 1,000 farms around the Dales beauty spot have been placed under restrictions and livestock movements cancelled. |
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In the countries badly hit by this disaster, livestock and working animals can be vital to the lives of rural communities. |
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He said livestock was judged on the hoof at the show and subsequently slaughtered at the East London abattoir. |
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Although badly damaged in recent years, evidence of wattle houses and a livestock pen were discovered. |
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There is a huge loss of livestock on account of shortage of fodder and water. |
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She saw people along the riverbank, bathing, washing their clothing, watering their livestock or fetching a bucketful. |
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While use rights in livestock are transferred frequently, ownership rights are predominantly transferred after the death of a herd owner. |
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Other potential agricultural applications of Fantesk include sprays, coatings for nursery stock, and livestock feed additives. |
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Anyone who has had to manage wayward or unruly livestock will know that the easiest way to do so is with food. |
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Producers with livestock might find the production of triticale a worthwhile alternative for grazing or green-chop. |
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It paid farmers to take acreage out of cultivation and to reduce livestock herds. |
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Foot-and-mouth disease is not just a menace to livestock raisers, but also to the abattoirs and food retailers. |
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Therefore it could not be used for keeping livestock and for farming in general. |
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Greenfeed insurance covers specific annual crops grown for the purpose of being cut, baled or silaged for livestock feed. |
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Machine sheds, empty livestock buildings, and silos can all hold grain, provided you do some preparation work. |
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The western side of the country is a great grass growing and livestock area which is the envy of many. |
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The grain was used for feeding the livestock and the straw for thatching the roof. |
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One livestock disease detected in several Nebraska swineherds is pseudorabies. |
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Here, town people can bring their own livestock to be slaughtered and then returned to them in paper parcels. |
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Mr Fuller has been part of JSR Farming for about 30 years, managing arable of about 900 acres and livestock on 500 acres at Givendale. |
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Certified-organic crop farmers, livestock producers, ranchers, and handlers all qualify. |
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Bell had a deep interest in livestock breeding and tried to develop a strain of sheep with a high rate of twinning. |
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Barley, wheat, citrus, vegetables, olives, and livestock are produced for subsistence and for trade. |
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The livestock industry argues that ranchers have a right to graze on any land near their water rights, even if they do not own the land. |
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In rotational grazing the pasture is divided into paddocks and the livestock moved from paddock to paddock. |
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Due to its low value for livestock forage, it is a concern to livestock producers and ranchers. |
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They also deprive Australian livestock of food by scouring the cultivated rangelands, which also facilitates erosion. |
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Many of you have complained about buying supplies retail, and selling crops and livestock wholesale. |
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Tissue samples from it and blood samples from other livestock on the farm are now being tested for the disease. |
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She has also called for more tools to kick-start agricultural and small livestock farming. |
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Fireworks must not be set off near livestock or horses in fields or close to barns and stables. |
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Traffic jams were expected because farmers were taking livestock with them. |
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Foxes cause great damage to livestock and farms in general, and as such they are considered to be a pest. |
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No animals or livestock were involved in the process of these sonic experiments. |
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Farmers tell him that livestock graze the sward very tightly so there is no wastage. |
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Inheritance is based partly on agnation, and agnatic kin are theoretically all potential heirs to each other's livestock and other wealth. |
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It is definitely a bit more tricky for those who have extensive movements of livestock on and off the farm each week. |
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Market forces would soon sort out the cattlemen who are agitating to continue agisting their livestock in alpine national parks. |
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My freedom to roam at will conflicts with the farmer's need to make a living and to rear the crops and livestock we all need to exist. |
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Brester's research program centers on livestock and grain issues, international trade, and agribusiness and farm management. |
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The study will look at retail prices, price spreads and movement of livestock markets. |
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Some farms have security men checking to make sure that livestock in fields are safe. |
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Anyone with knowledge of livestock and pedigree cattle will appreciate their true value. |
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Their proposal would allow wolves that attack hunting dogs or livestock outside of fenced areas to be shot. |
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Dams were one solution, both to slake the thirst of livestock and to feed patches of green lucerne for ostriches. |
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The council proposed to transport livestock from the saleyards to the Mid West. |
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One of Western Australia's biggest livestock transporters is about to increase his cartage rates. |
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Others, like the Shetland and rough collie, have been taken up by show breeders and are virtually useless for livestock work. |
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During this season, the herders of animals would kill off all the livestock that was not to be wintered over. |
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The Thompsons operate a 300-acre diverse crop and livestock farm, raising beef cattle and hogs. |
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Angry farmers are up in arms after plans to build a new livestock market were thrown out. |
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The extent of livestock loss to wolves is often overstated, wolves typically prefer their wild prey. |
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Shepherds look for exceptional athletic ability, a biddable nature, and superior livestock sense. |
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Ms Lloyd said cacti could injure livestock and working dogs and contaminate wool. |
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Species of arrowgrass that poison livestock are widely distributed in marshy pastures and native grass hay areas throughout the United States. |
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There is work around livestock that simply can't be done without a real working dog. |
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Many take to the long paddock to feed livestock as the state's west slips into drier conditions. |
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Irish livestock hauliers make use of staging posts to ensure that animals are rested, foddered and watered at regular intervals. |
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Workers must be trained in safe handling techniques of livestock medical wastes, including medical sharps. |
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In the United States the Komondor is primarily a home guard and companion, and livestock guard dog. |
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The gophers also dig holes which farmers claim cause livestock to fall and break their legs. |
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The field was alive with activity as the many livestock contests took place. |
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As a general rule, puppies raised with livestock begin to guard earlier than Komondors raised in the house. |
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During that time he has auctioned both prime and store stock in several of the leading livestock markets across the country. |
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The mow stores baled straw and hay for emergencies and provides insulation for the livestock area below. |
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Animals are reared without the routine use of drugs, antibiotics and wormers common in intensive livestock farming. |
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His statement about building livestock barns in swampy areas is particularly insulting. |
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This configuration recalls the form of traditional livestock barns with a center walkway and animal stalls to each side. |
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The Greenore export lairage should be designated as an assembly point for livestock from the Cooley area for movement to factories. |
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It is unpalatable to livestock because of its bitter taste so ranchers consider it to be a noxious weed. |
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Commercial livestock are generally produced by crossing breeds, strains, or lines. |
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The fact that all livestock are inherited along the matrilineal line is exceptional. |
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And last night restrictions banning the transportation of livestock were reimposed in the Settle and Clitheroe areas. |
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Although musk thistle is not poisonous, livestock will not graze near the plants and may refuse to enter heavily infested areas. |
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Livestock farmers claim that calling a vet to livestock only happens in extreme emergencies anyway, because of the financial restraints on farming. |
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Tomberlin is investigating the use of the soldier fly to turn livestock manure into a source of protein and energy for poultry, while reducing numbers of the common housefly. |
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In response, a local organization called the Cheetah Conservation Fund began breeding Anatolian shepherds as livestock guard dogs and giving them to farmers. |
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Where possible avoid purchasing fodder from other livestock farms. |
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Close to it was a ditched enclosure, interpreted as a corral for livestock awaiting the feasts, perhaps to be slaughtered in sacrificial ceremonies. |
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In the US, tornadoes twisting at 300 mph sometimes sweep a path a mile wide over 50 miles, lifting and dumping trucks, barns, livestock and people. |
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Brands are one of the most interesting tools used by livestock people. |
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Provide a copy for the livestock transporter to complete the transporter declaration for the consignment of pigs and retention in transporter company records. |
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Concerns have been raised that livestock valuers and farmers have colluded to increase the value of animals culled during the crisis, a national newspaper has reported. |
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With a steady water supply, Pima culture flourished until the arrival of Euro-Americans and their livestock signaled drastic environmental changes. |
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Measures to introduce new EU-wide controls on feed for farmed livestock in England were announced this week by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. |
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They asked to be informed if the prospects of the livestock traffic in 1930 were likely to be such as would justify the reduction in lairage charges. |
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To provide protection from predators and thieves, just about everyone in Laikipia keeps their livestock at night in makeshift corrals of thorns, called bomas. |
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Black bears, grizzly bears, mountain lions, bobcats, and wolves have been effectively removed from most U.S. farming areas, leaving coyotes as the top livestock predators. |
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In the wide-open expanses of the American West, where livestock outnumber Democrats, William Bryk has found a home. |
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Acres of land had been left wasting, livestock and citrus farming had lost their way and the workers had been retrained in professional and academic disciplines, he said. |
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Forage crops and native rangelands are vital to U.S. livestock interests, since they're the main feed staple of all ruminant animals tied to the meat and dairy industries. |
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With a careful and timely matching of withdrawals with tax-deductible expenditure like livestock purchases, the tax incidence can be cancelled out. |
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The job of encouraging better care of livestock is Sisyphean. |
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Riparian fencing allows dormant-season rotational livestock grazing. |
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Lions and other large predators like hyenas and leopards are killed by livestock owners who have no patience for the carnivores' appetite for cows, sheep, and goats. |
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Farmers are reeling from the latest shock to hit their industry, as a devastating livestock disease made its first appearance in Britain for 20 years. |
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Since access restrictions have been relaxed its farm conservation team has been giving free advice to farmers whose livestock was culled during last year's outbreak. |
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Caring for livestock or tending the land seems an idyllic lifestyle. |
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The fire led to a few of the nearby farms and livestock being evacuated. |
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This was where they corralled their livestock at night, and where the warm smell of animals still lingered. |
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European species have fatally poisoned children, but baneberries are not reported to have caused death to humans or livestock in the United States. |
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And in the land of livestock and grassland and corral and endless highway, that is more or less everything. |
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Farmers fatten livestock for the market so why don't fishermen ranch fish? |
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Small farmers were no more likely to report morbidity than those with large farms, nor was there a difference between arable and livestock farmers. |
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The school also pioneered training for students in livestock production and husbandry when pigs and poultry were kept at the school and managed on a commercial basis. |
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The Mikuole Festival is essentially a fair of the livestock raisers. |
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Government subsidies sustain corn growers and livestock raisers. |
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And some people see this as the humanisation of domestic livestock and the humanisation of pigs that are being used similarly for transplantation research. |
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However, the inquiry was also asked to look wider at other animal diseases which pose a threat to livestock in Britain, such as classical and African swine fever. |
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Hunting was primarily a male activity everywhere, housebuilding and agriculture primarily female, while work with livestock varied among ethnic groups. |
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A British raid on Mount Vernon had stripped him of his livestock and many of his slaves. |
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The swine developed blistering which looked like foot and mouth disease which causes great concern to livestock people and even more to regulatory people. |
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Activities such as slash-and-burn cultivation, logging for firewood, and livestock pasturage by the landless seem to have been tolerated in commonly owned village forests. |
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The live trade involves the export of over 200,000 head of calves and weanlings to Europe and up to 70,000 head of livestock to international markets. |
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It is very important that farmers selling livestock and other products start to think in terms of the metric system of weights and measures such as kilos and litres. |
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The 211 cattle and 1,000 sheep at Mount Pleasant Farm have been culled and the slaughter of livestock at two contiguous farms was continuing yesterday. |
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In all seasons, droves of cattle, sheep, hogs, geese, turkeys and other livestock shared the busy road with wagons loaded with grain, barreled beef and pork. |
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The livestock are all treated homeopathically if they're ill. |
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The care of livestock required those who shared common rights to act together to provide supervision for their beasts and to prevent overstocking. |
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It is used in livestock and poultry breeding enterprises and hoggeries to help establish production files and guarantee products to trace to sources. |
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Tutsi guerrilla fighters would not let me catch so much as a feral chicken in a countryside swarming with the livestock of their murdered fellow tribesmen. |
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Perhaps it is down to all the steroid hormones pumped into livestock to make them bigger in order to satisfy our insatiable appetites for dead animal. |
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The Department has reminded all farmers and transporters of livestock that farm animals are at risk of suffering from heat stress during hot summer weather. |
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In general, FSA personnel helped clients to develop farm plans that moved them away from cash crop agriculture toward a mixed livestock and subsistence economy. |
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These herders move their livestock over long distances in search of grass. |
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Children provide much-needed labor in herding livestock and farming. |
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The species is desired by nomadic livestock herders for harvesting. |
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It is the largest full-service marketer of livestock in the Northeast. |
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Renowned livestock specialist and autism advocate Temple Grandin brought her unique intellect and wit to Reddit. |
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The report told a similar story for soybeans, which are used primarily to make food oils, biodiesel, and livestock feed. |
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Buses have been stoned or shot at, homes burned and livestock slaughtered. |
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They were owned animals and presumably valuable livestock that just did not happen any old how but were deliberately bought and raised by a farmer. |
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And if that bacteria has encountered too much antibiotic in livestock feed and has developed antibiotic resistance and you eat it. |
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Biologist Mattson is alarmed by the abrupt 2008 rise in grizzly mortality from conflicts both with livestock and hunters. |
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In 1984, when famine was at its height, the country was still exporting linseed, cottonseed and rapeseed grains to the UK and Europe for livestock feed. |
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Older methods of well construction, and the well's location in relation to septic or livestock facilities on many farms, makes older and shallow wells prone to contamination. |
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The bacteria in the bowels of livestock are influenced by the antibiotics gobbled up. |
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To test for faecal bacteria contamination from septic tanks or livestock sources, contact your local council or shire environmental health officer. |
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They will share with us their wealth in livestock and their knowledge of the sheepfolds and pastures as we will share the bounty of the barley field and vineyards. |
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Thus, farmers say they stake their livestock under the hot shade of the Indian jujube in the winter but they put them under the cool shade of sissoo in the summer. |
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Allowing livestock to consume annual forage left in windrows has become a common method to reduce costs associated with harvesting, storing, and feeding forage. |
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Some local governments are requiring stall-feeding of livestock with forage gathered by hand, hoping that this confinement measure will permit grasslands to recover. |
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It is also non-toxic and hypo-allergenic to livestock and humans. |
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The long phase-in period for Aussie beef and the tiny non-tariff opening for Down Under dairy did not satisfy many in the U.S. livestock industry either. |
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This, he said, is backed up by remnants of nibbled grass in the mound, which he thinks shows livestock were brought to graze on land that was once boggy marshland. |
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For example, as suburban sprawl encroaches on farmland, people have more contact with both stable flies and house flies, creating conflict with livestock producers. |
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It used to carry livestock but sailed its final voyage with a hold full of Syrian men, women, and children. |
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These were not feral pests they were owned animals and presumably valuable livestock that just did not happen any old how but were deliberately bought and raised by a farmer. |
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The site, next to the suspension bridge near the village of Thorpe, belongs to a farmer whose livestock was destroyed in the foot-and-mouth crisis. |
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Even for some livestock owners in developed nations, livestock can serve as a kind of insurance. |
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The amount of waste material produced by livestock globally is considerable, as is the effort required to dispose of it. |
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Appropriate methods to slaughter livestock were an early target for legislation. |
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Where livestock are used as a source of power, they may be pushed beyond their limits to the point of exhaustion. |
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