Hay goes through a process called "curing" to reduce moisture levels before it can be baled and stored. The time this takes can vary depending on weather conditions, but typically it can take anywhere from a few days to a couple of weeks to properly cure hay. It's important to monitor the hay during this process to ensure it is fully dried before storing to prevent mold and spoilage.
If the hay is loosely packed, you can easily burrow through a haystack. He jumped from the roof onto a haystack, not noticing the pitchfork that was left in it.
You are talking about two different words. "Hey" is a kind of rude way to hail someone: "Hey you!" It's not quite as rude as it used to be since people use it on the Internet all the time. "Hay" on the other hand means dried grass or other dried plants used as fodder for cattle or horses. It is a very ancient English word, because people have been using hay for a long long time. It also used to mean a hedge.
The proverb "make hay while the sun shines" means to take advantage of favorable conditions and opportunities while they last. It emphasizes the importance of being proactive and acting promptly before circumstances change. Essentially, it serves as a reminder to seize the moment and not procrastinate, as opportunities may be fleeting.
The proverb "make hay while the sun shines" means to take advantage of favorable conditions while they last. It emphasizes the importance of acting promptly and seizing opportunities before they disappear. Essentially, it encourages people to work hard and be proactive during times of abundance or good fortune.
The number of bales of hay that can fit in a haystack will vary depending on the size of the haystack, the size of the bales, and how they are stacked. It is not possible to provide an exact number without specific dimensions.
It would take 12 bales of hay!!!
The word "hay" has a long a sound.
Yes! As long as you are taking them for hay fever.
Hay is typically pronounced with a long "a" sound, like in the word "say."
Yes. The AY creates a long A sound as in day and say.
This depends on what else the horse may be getting to eat. If the horse is on a complete feed it will probably be OK, but it is always best to provide hay or grass whenever you can as this is what horses evolved to eat. If hay is scarce or just not available look into possibly feeding oat straw in small amounts daily. You could also try to find hay cubes or hay pellets. It should be noted that hay or grass is what enables a horse to maintain it's body heat in the winter through digestion of the long stemmed fiber in the hay and grass. Without these things the horse may need to be blanketed or even brought inside, particularly if it does not grow a very thick winter coat.
they usuallo eat y eat long grass horses are the one who eats hay
They can, but they shouldn't. If your guinea pig hay has ants coming out of it, it's long past time to change the hay.
If she has water and salt mineral mix along with her hay, then yes she can. It also depends on the hay quality: if she's fed poor quality or low quality hay, she can eventually starve on it, though it'll take a number of months or so.
No. As long as the hay is not too moldy, it won't hurt cattle in any way.
If you mean, does the horse heat himself from the outside, then no. They use chemical means and muscular actions to heat themselves. Chemical actions go on that create heat, and they also, through muscular action, lift the hairs on their back to create a thermal blanket arounf themselves. Another way they get heat, is the grass or hay they heat. it ferments in their gut, and this produces heat also. However, when they are not given free choice hay or grass (as some are when kept in a stall) or they are clipped and/or blanketed, the clipping prevents the winter coat from being used because there is none, and the blanket will cause the muscles used to lift hairs atrophy. and the blanket doesn't heat the horse evenly either, so it does a bad job. Since a horse heats from the inside out, this is why it is better to keep a horse unclipped and unblanketed during the wnter, and to allow free choice hay.
first you take of the 2nd hay stack then you take off the 4th hay stack then the 6th and try it about 3 or 4 times