May is the traditional satellite dish breeding season in Berkshire. As seen on the photo, the young ones are out of their underground dens, cautiously investigate the surrounding environment

Follow

@Columbkille

The reason far wrapping the bales I was told was that the grass is fermenting in anaerobic atmosphere, which prevents fungi and rot from developing inside the bales. In Poland these are called "kiszonka" which means "sour grass". The alternative is to dry it out, thus making hay, but it's more difficult as a single rain can ruin the process. On the other hand, cows can digest this "sour grass" while horses for example cannot and they need actual hay.

@thor

@kravietz @thor Interesting. I wonder why American farmers don't cover it.

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Mastodon 🔐 privacytools.io

Fast, secure and up-to-date instance. PrivacyTools provides knowledge and tools to protect your privacy against global mass surveillance.

Website: privacytools.io
Matrix Chat: chat.privacytools.io
Support us on OpenCollective, many contributions are tax deductible!