if you own the property and the grain yes. if you are asking can you go collect someone else's property after they are done with it then no...that is still larceny and trespassing depending on circumstances.
The traditional meaning of "gleaning" is to pick up the leftover grain that has fallen to the ground and was left behind during the harvest.
Some sentences using the word 'granary' might include: We asked the feed merchants to deliver the grain to the granary, but they left it outside the barn. The part of Europe where we lived was referred to as The Granary because it was such a huge producer of grain. We're expecting such a big grain harvest this year we'll need to build a bigger granary to store it all once we've threshed it.
Endosperm
The reason why is that the Farmer who owns the crops is most likely waiting for the crop to dry down. This refers to moisture content of the grain. Depending on the grain, you would have to spend much more in money to "dry" the grain down in a storage bin. This is a costly process. They also do not harvest and store grain when the moisture is too high, this leads to mold and fungus growth. Most of the time in the midwest, all of the crops are finished or harvested no later than mid-October. If crops still remain, its most likely do to inclement weather such as excessive rain which takes much longer to dry the grain and the fields until harvest can resume in cooler weather.
You dont collect it. You find it.
She is in the pond left to the chapel. You must make an offering to her.
Semolina
endosperm
you can get the pond by unlocking the left island and it has the harvest goddess but you can only get her by throwing an item in it
There is no "Large hard grain " left after milling. Once the wheat has been milled into flour, the only by products from the grain is; Wheatgerm, Bran and Pollard. Generally the Bran and Pollard are used in stock feed manufacturing.
Farmers harvest produced because if the plant is left it will go to seed and the produced value will be, very much, reduced.
For grain, they are called "harvesters" or combine harvesters, which is a huge machine that gathers the crop (be it corn, wheat, barley, oats, etc.) and goes through the process in the machine of separating the kernels or seeds from the rest of the plant. What's left over is ejected as chaff, which can be baled for straw. In the old days, threshing machines were used to separate seeds of grain from the chaff.