Cherhill Down 05.1
Cherhill Down 05.2
Avebury Harvest
Cattle Grazing in The Avenue Crop Edit
Farming at Yatesbury 2
Farming at Yatesbury 1
Tines Down
Winter on the Farm
The Corner of the Field
The Fallen
Winter in Limpley Stoke
Left by a Fence
Sub Zero Puddle
Tunnels of plastic film
Oil seed rape
Vintage Red Tractor
Approaching Storm Over Kellaways
Haymaking
Castle Cary
Farming in North Wilts
Land Near Crummock Water and Buttermere
HFF
Places - Castle Cary
Castle Cary (Better Edit)
Tree, Trailer and Pylons
Elephant Power
Picking Cotton
"Baking Secrets (4)," 1944
Barn and Snakeskin (Detail)
Barn and Snakeskin
Under the low clouds
Resonant Yellow
Cherhill Down 03
Cherhill Down 01
Cherhill Down 02
A Wiltshire Field
Massey Ferguson 290
Lanz Bulldog (26.08.2018)
A Tractor Passing Through Avebury
Fresh corn-on-the-cob sure is tasty
Farming is satisfying but not easy
Things they might not have considered
How to be a smart shopper?
The students
These were a little older
These pigs were less than 48 hours old
Some had not been close to livestock before
They were high schoolers from many different place…
Haystack
Hay Bales
Harvesting (06.07.2018)
Wheat (24.06.2018)
Paper waste
Fancy Cow and Calf
Fancy Cow and Calf (Cropped)
old rototiller
Dusty Springfield
Harvested
A Farmer and His Cows
Just Another Field ...
The Other Side ...
The Three Lambs ...
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Cherhill Down 04
After harvesting cereal the dry stalks of straw are baled. The most common type of baling machine in industrialised countries today is the round baler. The machines wrap netting or twine around the bales to make them keep their shape. Being round, they will of course roll away and transporting them presents safety challenges. People have been killed by bales falling on them, or on their vehicles when following a load.
Straw has many uses. Often it is used for livestock bedding and fodder. Cattle and horses will eat straw but other feed is desirable to keep their health and strength up such as hay, which is dried grass, and much more nutritious than straw.
Photographed with a Nikon D2Xs at ISO 100, and a Tokina 50-135mm f/2.8 lens.
Straw has many uses. Often it is used for livestock bedding and fodder. Cattle and horses will eat straw but other feed is desirable to keep their health and strength up such as hay, which is dried grass, and much more nutritious than straw.
Photographed with a Nikon D2Xs at ISO 100, and a Tokina 50-135mm f/2.8 lens.
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