Absolutely, any farming that involves animals is a year round activity, they need care, feeding and cleaning up after every day.
Cattle farming is done all year round. There is no particular time of year where cattle are raised and harvested like crops are.
Because horticultural farming can artificially produce the conditions needed for growing strawberries all year round.
Depends on where you're at. In places where the weather changes a lot over the year, farming activities are closely linked to what time of year it is. In places where the weather stays pretty much the same (close to the equator) some crops can be farmed year round.
The Southern Colonies were best for farming because they offered the longest growing season. The hot, humid summers and mild winters meant that farming could often take place year-round,
Farming is a year round occupation and while summer may be the period of growth, work in the other seasons is needed to ensure that the summer yields a good autumn harvest.
Viking raids did not occur year-round; they were primarily seasonal, taking place during the warmer months from late spring to early autumn when sea conditions were favorable for travel. The Vikings would typically launch their raids in the spring, returning home by autumn to prepare for winter. During winter months, they focused on farming, trading, and other domestic activities. Thus, while raiding was a significant part of Viking culture, it was not a continuous year-round activity.
"Year 'round" is the correct way to write it as it is a shortened form of "year-round".
a ostrich can lay 25 eggs in a year
$800,000 a year.
Year Round.
your asking a seven year-old
Because farming meant that people stayed in the same place year-round, growing, tending to, and harvesting their crops. Before farming, people were nomadic -- they traveled around in tribes, never staying in the same place very long. But once people began farming, fixed, permanent communities began to develop.