gold ones
I know of no car in any Jack and the Beanstalk movie or in the book.
'Jack and The Beanstalk' is a proper noun, the name of a fable, a title. A proper noun is the name of a person, a place, a thing, or a title. Proper nouns are always capitalized.
he is cheekybraveboldand very uglyalso smellybut very kind heartenlast but not leastsensible and hes a murder
"Jack and the Beanstalk" is a classic English fairy tale about a boy named Jack who trades his family's cow for magic beans. When the beans grow into a giant beanstalk overnight, Jack climbs it and discovers a land in the clouds inhabited by a giant. He steals from the giant, who chases him down the beanstalk. In the end, Jack cuts down the beanstalk, causing the giant to fall and perish.
The setting is inside Jack's house, the path to the market to sell the cow, and inside the giants castle. Your Welcome Man Hope it Helped
Hawks or falcons.
Actually, roosters are usually the only kind of chicken eaten. Hens are kept for egg laying and a few roosters stay on a farm to fertilize the many females. Since few are needed to keep the flock fertile, the roosters not eaten (There are a large excess of them after the eggs hatch) are sold to food processing plants. I hope I have answered your question.
A hen will lay eggs with or without a roosters presence. Without the rooster the eggs will be non viable or unfertilized. To assist in egg production you should feed the hens extra protein and minerals for healthy eggs. This is much easier done by purchasing a produce called Layer pellets or laying "mash". All feed and grain outlets can provide this for you on demand.
When everything is perfect from them ..ie: weather , temp ... amount of daylight .., they will lay by themselves. In the winter you can help them along by adding light to mimic spring or summer daylight hours. Laying crumbles or laying pellets will help provide the nutrients they need to lay , but even without it , as long as everything else is right, they will lay .
The hens will rejoice!! Hens like fruit of any kind. They will eat the skins of most fruit also but seldom citrus. The flesh of the fruit is fair game for them however and they get good nutrients from citrus. My hens eat oranges, grapefruit and even lemons.
Yes, the young hens eggs are always harder and thicker because they are making full use of the nutrients they ingest. The first eggs laid by a pullet age 5 to 8 months will have the hardest egg shells providing they have optimum nutrition available.
Crocodile eggs