Sleeping beauty, The Nettle Spinner, and Rumpelstiltskin are the three I know of.
The fairy tale you are referring to is "Rumpelstiltskin." In this story, a miller's daughter is forced to spin straw into gold by a magical imp named Rumpelstiltskin.
In the fairy tale Rumplestilskin, the miller's daughter is required to spin hay into gold, but is able to negotiate for a strange dwarf-like man to do it for her.
Once a fairy had a spinning wheel. Then it farted. Then it died. The End.
Tangled
The pig who made his house of straw and hay was the youngest of three in the fairy tale "The Three Little Pigs."
Dramatic
Alexandra Hay died on 1993-10-11.
You have to go at the side of the barn (the one with hay) then just follow the map..
The setting of the Rumpelstiltskin story is typically a small village or kingdom, usually in a medieval or fairy tale-like setting. The story takes place in a miller's house, the king's palace, and the forest where Rumpelstiltskin lives.
When wool is sheared off a sheep it is tangled, full of bits of hay and manure, dirty, greasy, and smelly. Scouring (washing) takes care of most of the grease and smell and some of the dirt. Carding untangles the hairs of wool and helps to remove debris like bits of hay. When yarn is spun without carding or combing it comes out very lumpy and clumpy. Ozark Handspun Yarns are intentionally spun without carding. A link to their site below shows how yarn made from uncarded wool looks.
John Hay Drummond Hay died in 1893.
Edward Hay Drummond Hay was born in 1815.
Edward Hay Drummond Hay died in 1884.
No, a bushel of hay is not equal to one bale of hay. There is approximately twenty bales of hay in one bushel or string bale or hay.
There is no such thing. Hay is hay regardless if it's a part of a hay pile, part of a hay bale, or anything like that.
Either alfalfa hay or grass hay but if would prefere alfalfa hay