would you mind a strange farmer shaving your pubes?
Sheep are dipped into insecticidal solutions after shearing to control and prevent infestations of parasites such as ticks, lice, and mites. This helps to keep the sheep healthy and reduces the risk of skin infections or diseases. Additionally, it can improve the overall welfare of the sheep by preventing discomfort and potential health issues caused by parasites.
Yes, of course it will die. The cause of death will probably not be from its long shaggy coat, though. If a domestic sheep is left un-shorn, the wool becomes matted with its droppings and burrs. Both can irritate the skin and lead to infected or infested lesions under the matted wool. The animal could die from that. Wild sheep, not having been bred to produce wool, are less likely to suffer from the matted wool problem--but they will still die...usually from being eaten by a predator. The sheep may not die. Many sheep that have missed the muster for shearing have survived for years. The fleece will get very heavy and may be more prone to fly strike.
A sheep herdsman is responsible for caring for and managing a flock of sheep. This includes tasks such as feeding, watering, and sheltering the sheep, as well as moving them between pastures. They also monitor the health of the flock and may assist with tasks like shearing or lambing.
Rounding up sheep is commonly referred to as herding or gathering sheep. It involves bringing them together into a group or flock, usually for tasks such as shearing, counting, or moving them to a different location.
We as humans have successfully cloned a sheep I am sure the name 'Dolly' comes to mind. But as for cloning another human being; ethics has gotten in the way of such an achievement, but it IS possible.but scientists observed that a cloned being is prone to infections and diseases..
10000 times a year
We get wool from sheep. That's why during spring and summer sheep are shaved. so we can have there hair when they don't need it, it grows back for winter and they are not harmed or killed. so we get wool from sheep.
Yes, because sheep can over-heat or get heat exhaustion in the spring and summer if their thick wool coats are not shaved off. Shearing sheep does not hurt the sheep in any way: the benefits actually vastly out weight the costs of sheering sheep.
Sheep have to be shaved and that is where the sheepskin lining comes from. But any leather or suede shoe comes from an animal that died.
Sheep are dipped into insecticidal solutions after shearing to control and prevent infestations of parasites such as ticks, lice, and mites. This helps to keep the sheep healthy and reduces the risk of skin infections or diseases. Additionally, it can improve the overall welfare of the sheep by preventing discomfort and potential health issues caused by parasites.
Linguists divide tenses into 'non-past' and 'past' as follows: I go, I went I am going, I was going I have gone, I had gone I have been going, I had been going Adding auxiliaries like 'will' and 'could' gives: I will go I will be going I will have gone I will have been going I could go I could be going I could have gone I could have been going The passive is formed as follows: I am shaved, I was shaved I am being shaved, I was being shaved I have been shaved, I had been shaved I have been being shaved, I had been being shaved Of course, very many people avoid such a complex form as: "That house has been being built for the last five years." Instead the will convert it into the active voice saying: "They have been building that house for the past five years."
Wool or yak hair grows naturally, just like on sheep or an angora goat. The hair is then shaved off and spun.
Yes, sheep are very much 'stupider than humans'. Sheep have very slow brains, thus the lack of 'smarts' as we say. Sheep can easily be herded and shaved and they couldn't care less about whats happening around them. It takes a pretty smart animal to be smarter than a human anyway.
By the breed of sheep being kept but eventually all sheep end up as meat.
Shepherds watch their flock at night.
There won't be a serial # on the back of the cylinder due to it being shaved off when modified for the 45 ACP cartridge
Yes, of course it will die. The cause of death will probably not be from its long shaggy coat, though. If a domestic sheep is left un-shorn, the wool becomes matted with its droppings and burrs. Both can irritate the skin and lead to infected or infested lesions under the matted wool. The animal could die from that. Wild sheep, not having been bred to produce wool, are less likely to suffer from the matted wool problem--but they will still die...usually from being eaten by a predator. The sheep may not die. Many sheep that have missed the muster for shearing have survived for years. The fleece will get very heavy and may be more prone to fly strike.