Pretty much everywhere in the united states. Likely to be where there's more sun all year round.
Oats are harvested when they have turned a golden-brown colour and the seeds are hard when a farmer tries to squeeze the seed in between their fingers. This is when this crop can be harvested for grain (which is collecting the seeds). In North America, oats are usually harvested in the autumn, which is around September into October. Oats harvested as green-feed or silage (chopped and fermented animal feed, stalks, leaves and seeds) are done so around four to six weeks before the crop would usually be harvested for grain. It is stored and fed later to livestock.
The dried stems and leaves of the oat plant after the oats have been harvested, to use as bedding or feed for livestock.
Yes. Just plant some of the oats harvested from the previous season, and they will grow to produce a whole new crop of their own.
Hay is dried grass or legumes (like alfalfa). Straw is the dried stalks of harvested cereals, such as wheat, barley, and oats.
Puritan's grew Fruits and vegetables. They grew barley, wheat, oats, and corn. They had a short growing season so they had to do with what they harvested.
Oats are oats, they are grown, not made. You can make cereal out of oats, but not oats out of cereal.
harvested
there are harvested in the spring
knock knockl ? who's there. Oats Oats Who OATS
The oats in granola are the same rolled oats you find in oatmeal.
crushed oats do the same thing then as regular oats
Actually the phrase is "sowing your oats" referring to the planting of oats in a field.