yes
Cattle manure is good to make any plants grow, grass or not. But, manure is best used in your garden than on your lawn. Manure is also best used out in the fields or spread out in the pastures.
Well rotted manure - rotted for at least 1 year. EVen when digging this into the soil, do not plant for at least 2 months to prevent the plants from being burned from the acid content. Horse manure is easily available, cow is better but there are arguments about using cow manure with the relation to BSE and CJD.
Ravenously! That's what any bovine, regardless of class (except for young calves who haven't quite learned what grass is yet), would do when turned out to a paddock of fresh, juicy, sweet grass!
Depending on the quality of the grass. It may if the quality is good. A new mother cow should have extra feed for the milk in the form of grain.
You get a new cow.
Because it burnt all the garbage that was left over by the hyenas. The ashes of the burnt down vegetation created new manure on which fresh grass and trees grew and the wilderness of the pride lands were restored.
New Sacred Cow was created on 2003-06-10.
Green manure's nitrogen content is very high, and it will burn growing plants. Green manure is great, on the other hand for starting a compost pile, if you mix it with some plant matter. It's also great for turning into a compost pile which hasn't been composting well. The best use of green manure is to dig it lnto the soil by trenching where it will rot and release Nitrogen.
The new moshling cow is called Betty the Yodelling MooMoo.
New Grass Revival was created in 1971.
Depends on the type of food intake (grass/silage/hay/palm kernal) but a guide is 55 - 60 litres per day.
When farmers plant new grass on burned grass, the new grass will start to grow and cover the burned area. The new grass helps to prevent soil erosion, restores vegetation, and provides feed for livestock. It can also help the ecosystem recover after a fire event.