but is it fit for human consumption or only
as animal fodder?
Not exact matches
A perennial cousin to bread wheat, wheatgrass was introduced to the Western Hemisphere from Asia in the 1930s
as fodder for farm
animals.
Most describe a brutal winter or spring storm in which the temperature plummets
as low
as minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit,
fodder is inaccessible and
animals die en masse.
It's most likely, the researchers suggest, that the rare white - lipped variant of the snail hitched a ride with traders traveling from the Mediterranean region through the Pyrenees on their way to Ireland — perhaps unintentionally, in
fodder for the trader's
animals or, more intriguingly,
as a part of the trader's food supplies.
The once dense and ubiquitous common reed (Phragmites australis) served
as raw material for homes, handicrafts, tools, and
animal fodder for thousands of years.
It is also used
as windbreaks, shade, and
animal fodder.
As I understand it, certified organic dairy farms gain «most» of their certification on the fact that they feed (if only partially) their cows with «organic
fodder» which of course, is going to contain «organic» grain and often other
animal products).
So a typical puppy mill is a torturous fear factory where poor
animals are treated
as cannon -
fodder, and one can only guess where his / her dog came from.
The stems can be used to make fiberboard and the leaves can be fed to
animals as fodder.