No. The fat in the milk comes from the way the grass was digested and the nutrients dispersed throughout the system. Full-fat milk is just another term for milk that has not been altered after coming straight from the cow.
Yes, unless you make a field in which there is grass already grown to the full length. This is only true for cows and sheep, not chickens.
The amount of calories in coffee is negligible. A full cup contains only about 5 calories, so a teaspoon would have very, very little.
Crab Grass, of course.
Dairy products, beef, and fertilizer. As 'Hidden Villa' would say, "Strawberry Milkshakes"... Recipe Requires: * One field of grass. * A few Strawberry seeds * A freezer * A blender * One cow # Plant strawberry seeds. Do not fertilize yet. # The cow eats grass. # The cow produces manure # The manure fertilizes the grass # The same manure is used to fertilize the strawberries # The manure also fertilizes vanilla bean plants (for ice cream) # The cow eats more grass (which has been fertilized now) # The cow produces milk and cream # Using vanilla and cream, make ice cream You now have strawberries, milk, and ice cream. 10. Freeze ice cream and berries 11. Blend together the strawberries, milk, cream, and ice cream. You now have: === ===
its about 600 calories
About 6 million calories in a full grown elephant
prairesgrasslands
quite big
Generally zero.
There are about 1,500-2,500 calories in a full chocolate cake, depending on the size of the cake and the recipe used.
Not all Australian flowers have petals because some plants just do not produce them. Flowering perennials are examples of plants that develop colors but lack full petals.
the best thing to do is say you have some cows put them in one pen full of grass for 2 hours then put them in a dirt one for a while then put them back this is not the best way but it is what i think might work sorry if this does not help