hay cock - definizione. Che cos'è hay cock
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Cosa (chi) è hay cock - definizione

STREAM IN WEST YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
River Cock; Cock River
  • Bridge over the Cock Beck, Aberford
  • Cock Beck from the bridge near the Crooked Billet public house, Towton
  • Cock Beck from the bridge on Barwick Road near the pub
  • The Cock Beck public house, Pendas Way

Haymaking         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
·noun The operation or work of cutting grass and curing it for hay.
haystack         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
¦ noun a large packed pile of hay.
Hay         
  • A traditional method of storing wheat hay in Punjab.
  • Haymakers, from the ''[[Grimani Breviary]]'', c. 1510.
  • Close view of loose grass hay.<!--fluffed out from a newly-opened bale-->
  • When possible, hay, especially small square bales like these, should be stored under cover and protected from [[precipitation]].
  • Late 19th-century hay boat with small square bales
  • Field of freshly baled round hay bales.
  • These round bales have been left in the field for many months, perhaps more than a year, exposed to weather, and appear to be rotting. Not all animals can safely eat hay with rot or mold
  • A tractor mowing a hay field, with the cut hay lying in the foreground.
  • 1885}}
  • Modern small-scale transport. Pickup truck loaded with "large square" bales
  • A completely wrapped [[silage]] bale in [[Austria]].
  • Horses eating hay
  • A [[round baler]] dumping a freshly rolled hay bale
  • Different balers can produce hay bales in different sizes and shapes. Here two different balers were used to create both large round bales and small square bales.
  • Round bales are harder to handle than square bales but compress the hay more tightly. This round bale is partially covered with net wrap, which is an alternative to [[twine]].
  • Poor-quality hay is dry, bleached out and coarse-stemmed. Sometimes, hay stored outdoors will look like this on the outside but still be green inside the bale. A dried, bleached or coarse bale is still edible and provides some nutritional value as long as it is dry and not moldy, dusty, or rotting.
DRIED GRASS, LEGUMES OR OTHER HERBACEOUS PLANTS USED AS ANIMAL FODDER
Haystalk; Haying; Hay bale; Haystacks; Grass hay; Hay balers; Haymaking; Haystack (pile); Haystack; Hay meadow; Hay bales
·vi To lay snares for rabbits.
II. Hay ·noun A Hedge.
III. Hay ·noun Grass cut and cured for fodder.
IV. Hay ·vi To cut and cure grass for hay.
V. Hay ·noun A net set around the haunt of an animal, especially of a rabbit.

Wikipedia

Cock Beck

Cock Beck is a stream in the outlying areas of East Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, which runs from its source due to a runoff north-west of Whinmoor, skirting east of Swarcliffe and Manston (where a public house has been named 'The Cock Beck'), past Pendas Fields, Scholes, Barwick-in-Elmet, Aberford, Towton, Stutton, and Tadcaster, where it flows into the River Wharfe.

It is a tributary of the River Wharfe, formerly known as the River Cock or Cock River, having a much larger flow than today. The name 'cock' may refer to a mature salmon, as it was a spawning ground for salmon and trout. Industrial pollution reduced the fish stock, but it has been recovering in the 21st century, aided by work from the Environment Agency. In places the beck was relatively narrow, but too deep to cross unaided; a feature which can still be seen today at many points.