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you can have up to 2 cows on 1 acre of land. but better if you only have 1
No ... cows can't survive underwater, and the octopus can't graze on land ...
This is highly dependent on your location, forage quantity and quality, soil type, and terrain. Some areas may have a lower stocking rate than others. For instance, in Nevada, you may be lucky to be able to graze a cow-calf pair on 10 acres of pasture per week. In North Carolina, however, you will more than likely be able to graze a pair on 1 acre of pasture per month.
A half acre can be big enough for a single Shetland but more land would be better. Especially if the pony would be grazing on the land, if you do place a Shetland on the half acre to graze you'll need to provide supplemental hay.
in early September to end of october on a Dewey morning in a field or meadow where sheep or cows graze and there is plenty of poo as it has fertiziled the land
To keep the land for animals to graze
Not me
In colonial times in New England, the "cowkeeper" was a person who was paid to supervise the movements of the cows to and from pasture. Since more cattle were being shipped in from the Old World, there wasn't enough room for all the cattle to graze in the "town pasture" or commons, so they were herded some distance from the commons to graze. Nowadays, the "cowkeeper" is called a rancher or cattleman, who has much larger tracts of land to have his/her cattle graze on than what the colonists had in the 15th and 16th century in America.
One acre of land in California is about the same as one acre of land on the moon.
One acre of land contains 43,560 square feet.
Land per acre really depends on the location. Land on the water is much more expensive per acre than land in the city.
show me a diagram of 1/4 acre of land