no not really they are a wool breed
The only way one will benefit from bulls, besides slaughtering them for beef, is when they breed cows to produce calves. A bull is worth half of the cowherd, and he'd better sire some nice calves otherwise he's not worth keeping.
Yes 200,000 franks worth and a herd of sheep
The spices of the East were valuable in 1492 AD. During these Middle Ages, a pound of ginger was worth a sheep, a pound of mace worth three sheep or half a cow. Pepper, the most valuable spice of all, was counted out in individual peppercorns, and a sack of pepper was said to be worth a man`s life .
There are a few places you can adopt a Shetland Sheepdog (Sheltie) in Texas. Here are a few of your options:Dallas/Ft. Worth Sheltie RescueHouston Sheltie SanctuaryAustin Sheltie Rescue
It depends on the micron and the quantity and quality - currently it ranges from $12.66 to $26.32 a kilo
The value of a sheep in terms of meat depends on the market price per pound of lamb or mutton. Typically, a sheep can yield around 45-60% of its live weight in meat. The value also varies based on the cut and quality of the meat.
Numbers started as a way to keep track of what you own. If you have one finger for every sheep you own, you have two hand's worth of sheep. However, if at the end of the day you only have a hand and a thumb's worth, you've lost some sheep. The question is, how many? That's where math started coming into the equation (pardon my pun). Also, people wanted to trade a certain number of their stuff (sheep, corn, shoes, whatever) to other people and wanted fair payment for it. How much stuff would you have left after you made that trade? They needed a way to calculate that. Hence, subtraction. You want to split your sheep into three groups so they're easier to handle? Division. How many sheep do you need if you want 6 hands worth of them? Write it out on paper and boom: Algebra. So basically, math was invented to organize, plan, rethink, and understand how many things* you have. (Sheep, corn, Nintendo gameboys, whatever. :)
No. Normally, wild sheep don't grow as thick of coats as domestic sheep, or live in cooler climates, so they don't need to lose their wool. Certain wild sheep do have winter undercoats that they lose, however. Over the years, domestic sheep have been bred to grow very thick coats that must be sheared. There is an experimental chemical that, when ingested by sheep, makes them lose their entire wool coat, thus eliminating the need for shearing, but the chemical is so bad for sheep that it's certainly not worth it.
Hell yeah!! Don't do it man.. It's just not worth it.
about 3 years, until it's big enough to be worth eating
Unless where you left it out is as cold as a refrigerator, I would not recommend eating it.
This may be the puzzle name over the river or puzzle number 93. The location is the Manor Border and the character is Ramon. The solution is worth 30 picarats and a Painting scrap for the Art Lover's House. Sheep to right cabbage to right sheep to left wolf to right sheep to right.