produce a strong yarn
The average KBH module builder can hold between 14 to 16 bales depending on the amount of compression and the overall weight of the cotton.
Forming it into bales via a baler, like hay-so it can be easily distributed. They are turned into nice square bundles and stacked like bricks.
depending on which kind...a lot
To halt the erosion of the bare dirt found there. Eroded surface material can clog storm sewers.
Most don't. It's actually rare even for farmers to build haystacks unless you're talking about the Amish or the few ranchers that like to stack hay the way it was done a hundred years ago. Anyway, haystacks are built so that they store hay instead of leaving it to waste out on the field, and are stacked so that they shed water if/when it rains. Hay is mechanically baled into large round bales or large or small square bales instead of stacked into a large haystack.
In the south it was cotton. Millions of bales of cotton were produced.
In the south it was cotton. Millions of bales of cotton were produced.
The noun bales is the collective noun for bales of cotton or bales of hay.
There were about 400,000 bales of cotton grown and produced in 1860. This number was so high because of the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney.
China is the worlds largest producer of cotton. http://southeastfarmpress.com/cotton/cotton-production-0314/Top 10 Countries Cotton Production.2011, agricultural sector, agriculture, australia, bales, Brazil, central asia, china, Cotton, cotton farmlands, Cotton Production, cotton production in 2011, cotton production in bales, farmland, farmlands, Game, geographonic, Greece, in bales, in million bales, India, largest cotton.
There were about 400,000 bales of cotton grown and produced in 1860. This number was so high because of the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney.
There were about 400,000 bales of cotton grown and produced in 1860. This number was so high because of the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney.
The number of bales that are produced per acre varies a lot by area, soil conditions, type of cotton, and weather conditions. For instance, in Lubbock, Texas in 2012, cotton production varied from 1/2 bale per acre to 4 bales per acre. The higher yields came from fields that were irrigated.
They are called "bales".
The largest producers of cotton, currently (2009), are China and India, with annual production of about 34 million bales and 24 million bales, respectively; most of this production is consumed by their respective textile industries. The largest exporters of raw cotton are the United States.
In China cotton bales are packed by using fully automatic, down packing baling presses with online bagging arrangements. This has resulted in full covering of the bales which saves them from contaminants and reduces manpower needed.
The weight of a cotton bale in 1850 was around 480 pounds. In 1850 almost 17,800 bales of cotton were harvested in North Carolina alone.