After the harvest the peasants enjoyed the collective right to glean and to graze livestock on the stubble. |
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I felt his smooth, warm fingertips graze the underneath of my chin and gently lift it so he could see my eyes. |
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Although musk thistle is not poisonous, livestock will not graze near the plants and may refuse to enter heavily infested areas. |
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I sit on the ledge and watch the sun play with incandescent shadows of deep green, as red deer graze in the distance. |
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The bonefish are right over there, a silvery school materializing out of the greener water to graze the shrimpy mud of the flat. |
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For the opera festival arts trail you will see six Cow Parade bovines graze the streets of Waterford. |
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He untacked and unloaded the horses, then hobbled them and set them loose to graze. |
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The tiny curls that fell from the upsweep fell perfectly to graze her shoulders. |
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Rats and guinea pigs nibble and graze continuously without well-defined meal times. |
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Sheep once again graze the surrounding hillside and shiny new tractors work the fields near the southern coast. |
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To the rear of Kelgara House brood mares graze in the fields of the neighbouring Meadow Court Stud. |
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Their diet includes both browse and graze, and they also consume some mosses and lichens. |
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Most species are browsers, but some include a substantial proportion of graze in their diets. |
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The killing is driven by a fear that the animals will transmit brucellosis, a bacterial disease, to cattle that graze near the park's borders. |
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While some grizzlies do nothing but hunt during calving time, most continue to graze bucolically on grass and wildflowers. |
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Sheep graze, rabbits burrow, the young were out, you will see a giant triangular box and nearby another magic dewpond. |
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They pitched camp near a stream, where they caught fish for supper, and the horses could graze on fresh, moist grass. |
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If they must graze on the hillside, the reservoir must be fenced off to keep them at a safe distance. |
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In April, half the steers were sent to a feedlot in Steele's Tavern, while the rest stayed in West Virginia to graze rotationally. |
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Producers in northeastern New Mexico typically purchase steers to graze pasture from different regions of the country. |
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In the spring, the manager must decide whether to graze out the crop or pull the stockers and harvest the crop. |
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Some of the land will be used for haymaking or left to grow wild and it is hoped that rare breeds, such as Exmoor Ponies could graze there. |
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For comparison, he let cattle graze on two pastures, and fenced them out and made hay from two other pastures. |
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When autumn chills the air, they strike camp and thread their way through the Nawar passes to graze their animals in warmer climes. |
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Her thick hair, cut to graze her shoulders, was hennaed a deep red, striking against her clear, translucent, alabaster skin. |
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I outspanned on what is now Market Square and let the oxen graze there whilst I walked up to where my Aunt lay ill in a tent. |
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Winter and spring cereals, potatoes and sugar beet are grown, while cattle graze old pastures and hay is made on ancient hay meadows. |
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If both fore-feet are affected, the animal hobbles around and often kneels to graze. |
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In late summer and early fall, flocks of tiny finches and other seed-eating birds swoop in to graze among the spent blooms. |
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As parrotfish graze they scrape away minute bits of white coral limestone along with the algae covering. |
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I was the passer of food, and whenever the waitress passed me the food to pass along, I would have to graze her arm. |
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Where were they going to pasture their sheep and graze their cows now that the land was taken? |
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The next time cattle graze a damaged field there will be an amount of levelling in any event. |
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There is also the loss of wild life, especially deer and their young fawns who graze high on the mountain slope and shelter in the forestry. |
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Whenever the local lairds tried to graze their beasts on the Selkirk commons hundreds of folk would turn out to drive them off. |
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If you open up the commons for everyone to graze their sheep, one person is going to go get their whole flock. |
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The higher graze angle allows a shorter focal length and also preserves the collecting area of the telescope. |
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Twenty crofters who share common grazing can meet regularly to decide how many beasts each can graze on the common. |
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Goslings graze with their parents out of the water whereas swans teach cygnets in the water to be aquatic feeders. |
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She explains that the animals instinctively know when the tide is ebbing, and thus when to come down to the shore to graze. |
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Lee probed the wound, sighing in relief when he determined it was just a graze. |
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In the open-field areas of northern France they could glean after harvest and their cattle could graze on the stubble. |
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White hart deer graze the lawns, said to be descended from two white harts given by Elizabeth 1 to her god-child. |
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Some graze, some browse, some feed on plankton, some are scavengers or detritivores, some are active carnivores. |
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He anaesthetised my finger and excised a wedge of skin that included the entire graze, leaving the wound open to granulate. |
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Highland cattle, rescued from the BSE cull and put out to grass, graze contentedly at the water's edge close to the croquet lawn. |
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The sheep are allowed to graze on rangeland for a good part of the year and are very healthy. |
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Lambs graze on organic grass on the farm, where the family also rears free-range pigs and then cure their own bacon on the premises. |
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They reach weaning age while still consuming a diet mostly composed of milk, while their mothers graze on grass. |
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About 46,000 cattle and sheep graze on Dartmoor, already declared a no-go area for walking, horse riding and other recreational uses. |
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Soweto's informal farmers, whose cattle graze on open land around the township, will soon have land officially provided for them. |
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The horses do not graze these fields, but I think the no-till idea will be of benefit when the pastures themselves need seeding. |
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A sufficient number of animals should be placed on the pasture to graze the grass down in less than 10 days. |
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This does not prevent shepherds from trying to graze their sheep wherever something green can be found inside the town. |
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Areas unsuited for cultivation are used to graze large herds of sheep, cattle, and goats. |
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Lloyd began with the idea of a common pasture on which villagers could graze their cattle. |
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Because cattle cannot climb to higher elevations, producers tend to graze their cattle in semiflat and flat lands, where precipitation is lower. |
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They've come south to graze their cattle and trade in the dry season from time immemorial. |
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Neighbours, who had been using the vacant land to graze their sheep, feel they have the right to continue to do so. |
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Each year during harvest time, this rural community in Mali is host to two nomadic groups that come to graze their cattle or to work as herders. |
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While few crops are grown in this hot, flat region, the grassland provides ample space to graze cattle. |
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Apparently, having the Freedom of the City of Galway means that you can graze your cattle anywhere in the city, even in Eyre Square. |
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Ordinary people had the right to graze their cattle and grow their crops on common lands, even though they did not technically own them. |
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So, instead of opting for the full blow-out, you could graze for an hour or so after the turkey on tangerines, almonds and the odd soft-centre. |
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She will eat breakfast and usually dinner without a problem but for the rest of the day she would rather graze on snacks. |
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There are a number of fine hotels in the town where you can graze in style on anything from satay to sushi to cheeseburger. |
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I can remember my stomach churning when one of my children would take a risk while playing a game and then fall and graze their knee. |
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I felt one graze the skin on my cheek, when I wiped it off, there was blood smeared on my fingers. |
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Or they race around the school yard, covered in a layer of gravel, waiting to fall and graze their knees. |
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She landed hard, eagle-spread on the ground, feeling the damp cold rough surface graze her back. |
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Rena's fingers lightly graze mine as she takes the flower back and sniffs it herself. |
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A graze is an injury to the skin in which skin is scraped off by rubbing against a rough surface. |
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At frequent intervals one can see their silver bellies as they twist about at the surface to gulp air or graze on algae. |
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They pick food from the surface of shallow wetlands, graze in open fields, and steal food from coots and diving ducks. |
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There's an abundance of tucker for birds who like to graze on insect and plants. |
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Ranchers graze cattle and water buffalo on floodplain grasslands to produce meat and secondarily dairy products. |
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Small ranchers in northern New Mexico pay to graze 1 to 25 cattle per ranch in this oasis all summer. |
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The livestock industry argues that ranchers have a right to graze on any land near their water rights, even if they do not own the land. |
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Now black yaks and white sheep graze peacefully on dry grassland, tended by Tibetan herdsmen clad in bright orange. |
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The cows are wintered at home on arable by-products and are moved to Fleensop to graze in the spring. |
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Cows and calves graze on orchardgrass and alfalfa pastures at Moonstone Farm. |
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Ewes heavy in lamb become very quiet, and near lambing are more vigilant and graze less. |
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To successfully graze and grow yearlings, a combination of very high quality winter and summer grasses must be available. |
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The animals either graze lazily or, in the case of the pigs, wait as the acorns fall into their mouths. |
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Farmers tell him that livestock graze the sward very tightly so there is no wastage. |
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Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs do not rootle but they do like to graze, so a grassed area is important. |
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Sheep graze, and cows gaze, over a bucolic, rustic world that their forebearers would recognize at once. |
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Just 10 diners a night graze from a 20-course menu including dishes as unusual as a savory chocolate foie gras tartine. |
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When the flood plains dry up cattle graze on the succulent marsh grass which grew while the plains were filled with water. |
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Agile wallabies graze on the lawns and bandicoots scamper across the paths then off into the paperbarks. |
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They simply graze on, their ears filled with thunderclaps and their coats filling with raindrops. |
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Some areas are covered with thick juvenile mussel beds on which abundant starfish graze. |
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Farmers needing to graze their animals on set-aside land should write to their Regional Service Centre for permission. |
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In the summer, the wild mammals are joined by flocks of domestic sheep and goats left to graze in the meadows. |
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They consider the desolate border area part of their territory and follow their goats, sheep and cattle there to graze. |
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To one side was a rolling expanse of pasture land, clustered with flocks of sheep so thick that hundreds must graze there. |
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Once land dries, graze out the soiled paddocks in order to maintain grass quality. |
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This ancient breed graze on heather grassland rich with wild flowers and herbs such as thyme, violets, orchids, primroses or bird's foot trefoil. |
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Cows graze contentedly in green fields, pigs and hens fossick in the dirt and bees buzz through orchards in bloom. |
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Many of the shrubs are berry plants, such as low bilberry, mountain cranberry, bearberry, and crowberry, and bears graze on these in late summer. |
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Town hall chiefs propose letting animals graze on parks to save on the cost of mowers. |
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Could you feed, milk, take out to graze, and muck out my cow while I'm away? |
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The visitor is mesmerized by its sunny beaches, snowy mountain peaks, endless plains where black bulls graze, shimmering lakes and mountain streams. |
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I proceeded to fall over and graze my knee badly, and decided to leave. |
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In the bluff countryside of Sparta, Wis., the hills roll, the barns are red, and Holsteins graze in the shadow of 11-foot-high pumpkins and 15-foot-long walleyes. |
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On the small dambos and edges of floodplains reedbuck and puku graze on the short grass while shaggy-haired waterbuck pop up here and there in the most unlikely places. |
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Over three-fourths of the beef calves produced in the US will be used as stocker calves to graze pastures prior to entering the feedlot for finishing. |
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Running her fingers through her hair with undesirably short clear nails, she flopped her hair again, letting it graze the crest of his strong jaw. |
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If your child seems to graze on snacks all day and claims she's never hungry at mealtimes, designate specific times for meals and snacks and don't allow snacking in between. |
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He looked perfect, apart from a slight graze at the side of his head. |
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She unsaddled the horse and tied it to a tree where it could graze. |
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Streams from the mountains' snows converged, so there was water for thriving crops like grapes and olives and lush grasses for cattle to graze on. |
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The following day the ground rose up beneath us, and the fir trees thinned to larches, and there was more Sun and open glades with grass for our horses to graze upon. |
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Cattle raising, an important source and symbol of wealth in the countryside, was feasible for many because the animals were branded and left to graze freely on open land. |
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There were a lot of townhouses which were surrounded by land which was used to graze the cattle and other livestock belonging to the wealthy inhabitants. |
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He was picked up from the forest when he went there to graze his cattle. |
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The Welsh Black Cattle and Jacob Sheep all graze freely with their young, and the Oxford Sandy and Black Pigs are also free-range, with pig arks for shelter. |
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Anyone can apply for a permit to graze their cattle in the long paddock. |
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She rubbed the horses down and let them loose among the grass to graze. |
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I accept that both the sheep and horses will graze the land. |
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Their regional rivals are the nomadic Missiriya tribe, who come down from the north into Abyei so their cattle can graze. |
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He also explained that in summer some herders migrate further up the mountain, moving into summer shacks, to let their cattle graze on better and different kinds of plants. |
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In Bhutan, cows and yaks graze, rice and wheat grow, and people live up and down terraced land that seems to kiss endless blue sky above and melt into pristine waters below. |
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The graze under his arm only required a little antiseptic and bandaging. |
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Without junk food on hand, I'm apt to graze on more substantial snacks. |
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This, he said, is backed up by remnants of nibbled grass in the mound, which he thinks shows livestock were brought to graze on land that was once boggy marshland. |
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With the help of other concerned citizens, they eventually succeeded in gaining a permit to graze their flocks on 14 sections of Forest Service land. |
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Scarids have fused beak-like jaws which they use to graze on algae. |
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None of them spoke as they followed suit, mutely unloading the weary, nervous shen of cargo and tack, then hobbling them and setting them free to graze. |
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Cattle would graze Appalachian pastures intensively and be rotated from paddock to paddock, just as grass-fed Argentine cattle graze on the South American pampas. |
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Pannage, or Common of Mast, stretches back to medieval times and allows commoners, as landowners in the area are known, to graze pigs in the forest. |
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This fungus helps the fescue survive tough conditions but also produces many compounds that are poisonous to cattle if they graze on it continuously. |
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Inland, hooved mammals such as the dorcas gazelles, dama gazelles, and addax graze while keeping a watchful eye out for predators such as jackals and striped hyenas. |
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A ha-ha was a six-foot deep ditch, vertical at the edge of the property, so that the neighbor's cattle could graze right up to the line, appearing to be one's own. |
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We graze sheep and cattle on a couple of hundred properties. |
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I propose that tourism and pastoralism should be partners, that areas of NT Parks dominated by buffel should be fenced, then cattle be introduced to graze the grass. |
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Vineyards and orchards flourish, and sheep and goats graze the hills. |
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The prince often let his palace horses out to pasture in the fields, to wander and graze, and whenever the peasant's horse saw his brother, he trotted over to visit. |
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Most antelopes are good runners and many of them graze in herds on plains. |
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They also graze in hilly or mountainous areas where the slopes are not steep. |
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In some cases rights to graze goats, geese and ducks are registered, whilst in others the type of livestock is not specified. |
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Deer and wild turkey graze on millet, rye, and fescue grasses between helicopter landings. |
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This dedicated pen prevents mistypes caused by hands and other objects that may graze the screen's surface. |
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Parasitised ewes will shed large numbers of eggs onto pasture where lambs will graze later in the season. |
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These hardy billies are brought by boat across the fjord to graze the sheer slopes in summer. |
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Steady SNACKER Steady Snackers mindlessly graze throughout the day, whether hungry or not. |
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Unlike the rest of their 400-strong flock, the Hebrideans do not graze on the heather, which has now spread across 15 acres. |
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Now English Nature is employing ancient breeds such as black Hebridean sheep to graze away the dominant growth so that the flowers can flourish. |
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Thousands of sheep, include the native Herdwicks which graze on the fellsides across the district, were destroyed. |
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American bison tend to graze more, and browse less than their European relatives. |
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It is larger than London's famous Hyde Park and Hampstead Heath put together and the freemen of the city have the right to graze cattle on it. |
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For example, in northern Scandinavia where snow may blanket the ground for many months, the hares may graze on twigs and bark. |
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Sea urchins graze on the lower stems of kelp, causing the kelp to drift away and die. |
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Typically, they allow the herds to graze freely over sizeable tracts of land. |
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Its mother leaves often to graze, and the fawn does not like to be left behind. |
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Consuming such an amount requires the manatee to graze for up to seven hours a day. |
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Most farms are managed so sheep can graze pastures, sometimes under the control of a shepherd or sheep dog. |
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Pasture based dairies are a more extensive option where cows are turned out to graze on pasture when the weather permits. |
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French lambs have been allowed to graze on lavender as it is alleged to make their meat more tender and fragrant. |
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They graze until their behaviour is synchronized, then the feeding becomes secondary and the process takes on a ritualistic appearance. |
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The dancers then graze thru the clashing of the bamboo poles held on opposite sides. |
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Cattle are often raised by allowing herds to graze on the grasses of large tracts of rangeland. |
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Most breeds prefer to graze on grass and other short roughage, avoiding the taller woody parts of plants that goats readily consume. |
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Sheep, however, graze well in monoculture pastures where most goats fare poorly. |
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When sheep graze, vegetation is chewed into a mass called a bolus, which is then passed into the rumen, via the reticulum. |
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For example, in England, many lands held as common lands were enclosed so that only the landlord could graze his animals. |
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The common land had been used for centuries by the poor of the countryside to graze their animals and grow their own produce. |
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With time, nutrients are leached from the organic material, rabbits graze the vegetation, and the species become more typical of daleside communities. |
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The duckbilled dinosaurs had broad, ducklike beaks. They walked or ran on their hind legs, and leaned down on their shorter front legs to graze on vegetation. |
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After 45 days, the calves are able to graze and forage but continue suckling until the following autumn when they become independent from their mothers. |
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The right to graze domestic stock is by far the most extensive commoners right registered, and its ongoing use contributes significantly to agricultural and rural economies. |
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They generally rest during day and graze in the mornings and the evenings. |
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Feed for their cattle is by far one of the largest expenses for dairy producer whether it be provided by the land they graze or crops grown or purchased. |
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We decided to graze the extensive menu of makimono, sushi and sashimi. |
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In proper California fashion we made our nooning by the roadside, pulling up under the shade of a hospitable sycamore and turning Sorreltop out to graze. |
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