on summer hay in summer

on summer holiday 8,600,000 results on the web Some examples from the web: I went to Bali on summer holiday. No, he's been away on summer holiday. It was on my summer holidays. I've told you, they're away on their summer holidays. I remember when you were little and we used to go on those crazy summer holidays. However you enjoy the season, HAY has the products to make your days feel more stylish. Wrap yourself in the Frotté Stripe towel after an ocean dip, lean back on the Palissade Chaise Lounge chair on a warm day, or enjoy an outdoor gathering late into the evening with the PC Portable lamp. Summer never looked so good. Plan your next vacation with our list of the best places to visit in summer. 1. Grand Canyon, Arizona South rim of the Grand Canyon A is one of the best times the to visit the Grand Canyon. While it's the most crowded time at the Grand Canyon, there are so many ways to experience it during the high season. a summer's day/one summer's day - grammar A summer's disregard A swallow doesn't make the summer a sweeping law enacted last summer across the summer After this summer is out of the way all the summer an advanced Spanish summer course An Ann Summer party and even unpredictable in the summer another summer under in Kansas In the summer trish feeds hay once a day, in the winter twice a day. Our new barn said she feeds hay every time she grains (twice a day). ChristineGrace is the bomb! True friends leave hoofprints in your heart forever. countrygirl 1,226 Member countrygirl 1,226 PostAug 21, 2007#72007-08-21T05:01 jelaskan pengertian sst dan sebutkan 5 contoh sst. Summer-annual grasses, which maintain relatively high levels of production during hot and dry conditions, can greatly reduce the risk of inadequate forage production during the summer. They also can be used as an emergency forage source when production of corn and hay crops is likely to be less than adequate. Plant Descriptions Summer-annual grasses differ in growth and production potential but have several similar characteristics. They grow best at relatively high temperatures 80° F and can produce under conditions of limited moisture. Sorghum is an upright-growing grass that has been bred for both grain and forage production. The grain sorghum types are relatively short growing less than 6 feet and provide moderate yields when harvested as a forage. Forage sorghum, on the other hand, grows tall 6 to 15 feet and has the potential for high yields. Of the two types, forage sorghum is preferred for forage production. Like corn, sorghum hybrids are classified by maturity. Late-maturing sorghums yield more than earlier-maturing types, but they may not reach maturity before a killing frost. Forage sorghums are usually harvested only once and are used for silage or green-chop production. Sudangrass usually grows between 3 and 8 feet high and has stems about ¼ inch in diameter. Solid stands of sudangrass grow shorter than when seeded in rows. Sudangrass develops only fibrous roots and does not have rhizomes. However, many stems may develop from a single seed if space is available. Sudangrass will regrow following each harvest until cool temperatures or lack of moisture inhibit growth. Sorghum-sudan hybrids or Sudax resemble sudangrass but are taller, have larger stems and leaves, and give higher yields. Hybrids tend to be coarser than sudangrass and vary in seed color and size, yield, and growth characteristics, depending on their parents. Like sudangrass, sorghum-sudangrass hybrids will regrow after each harvest unless environmental conditions are restrictive. Millet has smaller stems and is more leafy than the sorghum, sudangrass, or sorghum-sudangrass hybrids. Pearl millet will regrow after harvest but not as rapidly as either the sudangrass or sorghum-sudangrass hybrids. German or Foxtail millet, however, does not regrow after harvest. Millet yields are usually lower than yields of sorghum-sudangrass hybrids. Establishment Summer annuals should be planted from two weeks after planting corn until the end of June. Soil temperatures should be at least 60° F. Seedings may be made as late as July 15 in emergency situations, but yields will be reduced because of limited moisture in the summer and cool temperatures during the fall. When using any of the summer-annual crops in a planned rotational grazing situation, two seedings should be made about three weeks apart. This will stagger the maturities and make grazing management easier. Forage and grain sorghum planted for forage should be planted in rows to facilitate harvest and minimize lodging. Avoid planting sorghums too deeply, as emergence problems may occur if planting is deeper than 1 inch in most Pennsylvania soils. Also, avoid seeding rates above 10-12 lb per acre since such rates can increase the risk of lodging, particularly with the tall forage sorghum types. Corn planters work well for planting sorghum provided the appropriate plates or feed cups are used to achieve the desired seeding rates Table 1. Sorghum can be planted using any tillage system as long as adequate weed control can be achieved. Table 1. Suggested seeding rates for summer-annual forage grasses in Pennsylvania. Seeding method Soil moisture expectations Dry Moist -lb/A- Rows 8 12 Grain drill 10 15 Broadcast 20 30 Fewer herbicides are labeled for grain and forage sorghum than for corn, so select fields where weeds can be controlled with labeled herbicides. When using Lasso or Dual, be sure to use seed that has been treated with the appropriate safener. When planting after a failed corn crop, be sure that the herbicides used on the corn are labeled for sorghum. The other summer-annual species can be broadcast seeded and cultipacked or seeded with a grain drill into a well-prepared seedbed. A firm, well-prepared seedbed is best, although acceptable stands may be established without tillage using no-till drills. Solid seedings result in finer and shorter plants, which are desirable for silage and grazing. Wider row spacings 20-36 inches allow for cultivation and result in better regrowth and more uniform production throughout the season. Narrow rows make for intense competition, and herbicides are rarely necessary when seeding is done in this fashion. Only a few herbicides are labeled for these summer-annual crops, so weed control should be considered carefully in selecting a row spacing. Row spacing itself, however, has relatively little effect on total forage production. Seeding rates vary, depending on seeding method and anticipated moisture conditions Table 1. Plant sudangrass, sorghum-sudangrass hybrids, and millets 1 inch deep in medium to heavy soils and 1½ inches deep in sandy soils. If the soil is dry and rain is not anticipated before seedling emergence, cultipack the seedbed to maximize seed-to-soil contact and moisture conservation. Fertilization For forage production, fertilize grain and forage sorghums using soil test recommendations. In lieu of a soil test, fertilize similarly to corn silage. Starter fertilizers can be used and should be most beneficial on the earliest plantings. Fertilization of the other summer-annual grasses should be similar to that of other annual grass crops. Apply sufficient nitrogen N 40 to 80 lb per acre at planting to ensure establishment and stimulate plant development. Use the low rate of N when manure has been applied and when planting after a failed corn crop that already received N. Another 50 lb of N after the first harvest is also recommended for optimum production. Crude protein content of these grasses is directly related to rate of N fertilization. In a Pennsylvania study, crude protein content of summer-annual grasses was percent when 50 lb of N was applied and percent when 200 lb was applied. However, caution must be exercised to avoid nitrate poisoning when high rates of nitrogen fertilizer or manure are applied, especially if dry conditions persist. The amount of phosphorus P and potassium K will depend on the soil test level and yield goal. At optimum soil test levels and a yield of about 4 tons dry matter per acre, 60 lb of P2O5 and 120 lb of K2O are removed. Use Both the grain and forage sorghums are most frequently used for silage or green chop in a single cut system, although they can be grazed if desired. Silage should be cut when the grain is in the medium to hard dough stage. Generally, whole plant moisture should be near the desired level for ensiling at this time. In some cases, where maturity is delayed, a frost may be necessary to reduce whole plant moistures to an acceptable level. Under most conditions, corn silage will produce higher silage yields and quality Table 2. The sorghums will produce similar or higher yields than corn silage on droughty soils or in fields with significant deer damage. Deer will not graze the sorghums to the extent they will corn. Digestibility of silage made from sorghums will usually be about 90-95 percent of well-preserved corn silage. Table 2. Silage yield and nutrient content of summer-annual grasses. Species Dry matter yield Crude protein Total digestible nutrients T/A - % - Adapted from Penn State Univ. Progress Report 224. Hybrid corn Forage sorghum Sudangrass Millet The other summer-annual grasses can be used for grazing, green chop, silage, or hay. When used for grazing, these grasses must be grazed at the proper stage of growth to reduce herd health problems and to optimize production. The best time to graze is when plants are between 18 and 30 inches tall 6 to 8 weeks after planting. Grazing when plants are less than 18 inches tall will delay regrowth and increase the chances of prussic acid poisoning in sorghum, sudangrass, and sorghum-sudangrass hybrids. A sufficient number of animals should be placed in the pasture to graze the grass down in less than 10 days. Six or more animals per acre may be necessary to accomplish this rapid grazing. After grazing, clip the residue at about 8 inches high to eliminate old stems and ensure high quality for the next grazing period. Do not graze or clip these grasses too closely less than 8 inches because that will weaken the plants and may kill them. It will normally take three to four weeks for sufficient regrowth for grazing again. Grazing can continue on these grasses until frost, or even after frost if the plants are allowed to turn brown one week after a killing frost before they are grazed. Do not graze frost-damaged or stunted sorghum, sudangrass, or sorghum-sudangrass hybrids until they have been killed turn brown by the frost. If the plants begin to grow again after being frost damaged, they should not be grazed until the regrowth is 18 inches tall or the entire plant is killed by frost and turns brown. Summer-annual grasses are ideal for green chop. For feeding as green chop, use the same harvest precautions as are used for grazing to avoid prussic acid poisoning. Cut the plants down to about 8 inches. Green-chop harvesting should not begin until the plants are at least 18 inches tall, but it should begin early enough to complete harvesting before the plants begin to head. Harvesting after the plants have headed will reduce dry matter intake and milk production in cows, and regrowth potential of the plants. Sudangrass, sorghum-sudangrass hybrids, and millet should be harvested for silage when they are between 36 and 48 inches tall or in the boot to early-head stage, whichever comes first. At this maturity, they contain excessive moisture for proper ensiling and should be wilted mowed and allowed to partially dry in the field before ensiling. Greatest hay yields are obtained if the annual grasses are harvested when the seed is in the soft-dough stage. However, proper drying is difficult at this stage. Therefore, harvest for hay is recommended during the vegetative stage before the heads emerge or the plant reaches a height of 4 feet. A hay conditioner should be used to mow and crush the stems for rapid, uniform drying. It is extremely difficult to field cure these grasses adequately for safe storage as hay. Potential Animal Health Hazards Prussic acid poisoning is a major concern in feeding sorghum, sudangrass, or sorghum-sudangrass hybrids. These species contain varying amounts of cyanogenic glucosides. In the rumen, these compounds are converted into prussic acid, which is readily absorbed into the bloodstream where it interferes with respiration. If prussic acid is present in the rumen and absorbed rapidly enough, the animal will soon die from respiratory paralysis. Forage species and varieties may be selected that contain low levels of cyanogenic glucosides. Piper sudangrass has low levels and millet is free of these compounds. The management practices described below also can reduce the risk of prussic acid poisoning from sorghum, sudangrass, and sorghum-sudangrass hybrids Graze or green chop only when grass is greater than 18 inches tall. Don't graze plants during or immediately after a drought when growth has been reduced. Don't graze on nights when a frost is likely. High levels of the toxic compounds are produced within hours after a frost occurs. Don't graze after a killing frost until the plant is dry the cyanogenic glucosides usually dissipate within several days. Don't graze after a nonkilling frost until regrowth is greater than 18 inches. Delay feeding silage for 6 to 8 weeks after ensiling. Nitrate poisoning can be a problem under conditions of high N fertilization, heavy manure applications, drought, or overcast weather, when the plants can accumulate high levels of nitrates. When an animal eats plants containing high levels of nitrates, the nitrates are converted into nitrites faster than the animal can properly utilize them. Excessive nitrites are absorbed into the bloodstream and alter the blood so that it cannot carry oxygen. This causes rapid breathing, fast and weak heartbeat, muscle tremors, staggering, and ultimately death if corrective steps are not taken. The same precautions for prussic acid poisoning will help prevent nitrate poisoning. Millet can cause nitrate poisoning but not prussic acid poisoning. High nitrate levels will persist in forages cut for hay but will be reduced by one-half or so if the crop is ensiled. If you suspect high nitrates in the forage, have it tested by a forage testing laboratory. Poisoning of horses fed sorghum, sudangrass, or sorghum-sudangrass hybrids also has been reported. The exact cause of poisoning is not known. Affected horses exhibit a staggering gait and urine dribbling; pregnant mares may abort. There is currently no treatment for this poisoning and affected horses rarely recover. Do not feed horses any of these summer annual species. Prepared by Marvin H. Hall and Greg W. Roth, assistant professors of agronomy 1. Input your text below. 2. Get it corrected in a few minutes by our editors. 3. Improve your English!One of our experts will correct your Input your text below. 2. 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Improve your English!One of our experts will correct your complete search of the internet has found these resultsIn summer days is the most popular phrase on the popular!In summer days594,000 results on the webSome examples from the webIt begins in a forest in France one summer day in only ask you to make an effort and try to imagine how it looks like in a summer was a summer day in semi-continental climate of the production area is marked by high temperatures in summer and sunny days alternating with cool nights in late for example, is a pair of rhinoceros taking a cooling bath on a hot summer day in the lowlands of that memory I had about those summer days in the Napoleon suffered his final defeat, but not before thousands of French and English men gave their lives on a steamy summer day in June of Hans, whose lungs caused him so much anguish until that dreadful, lovely day in summer when he couldn't get up any summer 2010, a day cream will be added to the faces linger in my memory like summer actually really like him in 500 Days of every lovely summer's day... 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I highly recommend it."– Aldecinete - Featured comment. “So worth the money."– Leslie November 2022 “I love how the editors make my work so much better."– Leslie - Featured comment. “Human understanding of the context. Artificial intelligence still cannot do this !"– Carlos November 2022 “The most useful app that I have ever truly appreciate your efforts."– Sarkis October 2022 Why choose TextRanch?Lowest prices Up to 50% lower than other online editing Times Our team of editors is working for you 24/ Editors Native English experts for UK or US Customer Service We are here to help. Satisfaction guaranteed! At among other uses is used for weekends, public and religious holidays, meal times, and times of day. For example at the weekend BrEng usage; at Christmas and at Easter; at lunch; and at 12 o'clock. Holiday breaks usually consist of more than one day, so when you refer to Christmas you are thinking about Christmas eve, Christmas day and Boxing day also called Day’. The Easter holiday is usually made up of two days; Easter Sunday and Easter Monday. Good Friday is not a public holiday in Italy but it is in the UK. Thus the question should read Did you have a good time at Easter? On is used in the following on the weekend AmEng, on Christmas day and on Easter Sunday. The preposition on is normally used for dates on 25th December and days of the week. In British English, people go on holiday’ but in American English they go on vacation’. In is normally used with weeks’, months’ and years’, for example in two two weeks' time; in July; and in 2016. Because the OP's sentence uses the plural noun form, holidays, and the choice is limited to at/in/on, I suggest that in is the most appropriate preposition. I'll call her in the holidays. In a multiple-choice test paper, a student's answer which completely ignores the options, will always be marked incorrect. Regardless if the given answer is an improvement, "during" and "over" as suggested by AleksandrH Comparing on the summer holidays and in the summer holidays the British English corpus seems to agree that in is idiomatic and grammatical, and doesn't find any instance of the former. Ngram link Meanwhile the American English corpus shows the occurrences of on the summer vacation red line as being exceptionally rare, compared with in the summer vacation blue line and in the summer holidays green line. For more detail see "On/at/for/over the weekend" in American English "On the weekend" or "during the weekend" Is there a difference between "holiday" and "vacation"? Holidays or holiday? "next two weeks" vs. "in 14 days from now" Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailI don’t know if you noticed but just a quick FYI summer is here. That’s right, the English summer, it got here in the last couple of weeks, somewhere after the coronation and that one weekend that everyone forgot wasn’t actually a Bank Holiday. And please understand, I love it. I mean, everyone loves the summer, fine... but I love love the summer. Not just a bit, not just in the casual, take-it-or-leave-it way of someone who lives in a country with things like regular hours of sunlight and government-subsidised fuel bills. For me, the summer is something I spend the rest of the year poised, lying in wait for. Each one of its much-promised, long-awaited 16-23 days is a sort of vitamin D-induced fever dream that I am determined to squeeze every drop of enjoyment it’s because I live in the countryside that I feel the return of summer so intensely. Like everyone who pretends not to be scared of cows and can’t call an Uber even if they wanted to, I consider myself deeply connected to the land. This year, as spring has progressed into winter and then back to spring and then, briefly, back to winter again, I have been walking the valleys of Gloucestershire, obsessively looking for all the ancient signs of summer’s arrival. And as soon as I spotted the very first Instagram reel of someone drinking an Aperol spritz on their decking, I knew it was it took was 25 months of winter, I thought to myself, hastily pulling off my winter jumper, and then my other winter jumper, and then the official HMS Navy diving suit inner I wear for the spring. It’s actually a good thing it rained for 11 of them, I laughed aloud, applying cream to the remains of my trench foot, using my winter pelt of toe hair to velcro on my sandals and marching out into the fields. It’s so beautiful, so vernal, so mean, sure, as a perimenopausal woman with hayfever, the summer technically makes it hard for me to do some things like, you know, breathe, or sleep, or produce what most people would describe as a “human” volume of sweat from my body. But actually, nothing makes me more relaxed than a two-month-long unreachable itch in my inner ears, or preparing my beach-ready body by auctioning a kidney on the dark web in order to book a shipping container with a bed in it in Cornwall for a week in yes, it’s true that every year the plants here engage in pollen-based reproduction on a scale that basically amounts to a sort of dendrological sex party, a plant-based Only Fans to which the 16 million of us with hayfever are unwilling subscribers. But there’s always the old remedies such as eating lots of local honey and you know what, I have it easy. It’s only beech and oak pollen that affect me. Some might say that this is like having tweenagers and only being allergic to two of the Jonas Brothers. But, very much like the Jonas Brothers, every May just the sight of them – inwardly several hundred years old but outwardly fresh, full of promise and absolutely everywhere – brings me joy, before my face inevitably inflates to three times its normal size and I weep because I just want it to that’s before you consider the joy of all the weddings and festivals and school fetes – so many! So many that I won’t have a single weekend to do something boring and predictably enjoyable like sitting inside my house with the curtains drawn eating a Fab lolly in my pants and not speaking to anyone. Look, if you have never experienced the natural high of consuming warm elderflower cordial and half a packet of anti-histamine to the tune of a local choir singing “Africa” by Toto, then please, do not naysay the English summer to love it, you see. As the middle of the year approaches, I set out earlier and earlier across the fields with the dog, feeling at one with nature, listening to podcasts that aren’t even about murder. I stick my legs in the river that I once tweeted about wild swimming in but in fact that one time I tried I got stuck with my wetsuit half way up and three nice women in bobble hats had to help me put my arse away. I’m basically Elizabeth Bennet, I think. The 2005 version, with Matthew Macfadyen Darcy not Wambsgans, for the avoidance of doubt. I’m definitely not like the 1995 Mrs Bennet, my brain says as I return home, one side of my face hot and wobbling. It has to say this quite loudly, over the noise of me shrieking and pouring local honey directly onto my eyeballs, but it’s important to listen to your inner tell friends abroad, those who have only ever visited the UK briefly, how excited I am about a summer staycation. I get voice notes in reply, and I know from their tone that they are squinting at their phone disbelievingly. Really? Summer in England? Look, I tell them, testily. You with your piazzas and functioning public transport infrastructure and your easy some might say lazy access to luxury goods like tomatoes and cheese sandwiches you just don’t understand. I mean, sure, the English summer can be unreliable. It can disappear for weeks on end just when you need it most, and then reappear in September and pretend it was around the whole time. But you don’t really know the UK summer, I mumble thickly, parked up at the big Tesco after another dog walk, rifling through my bag for tissues and then pausing to blow my nose on a child’s sock. People only ever say nice things about it on social media, and that’s because it’s objectively lovely and not in any way because we’re worried that if we don’t it will leave and might never come until next Thursday at least! the summer is here. And until then, you better believe I’ll be out roaming the fields, stepping carefully among the skylarks and the orchids and a bunch of other plants that I have identified on an app through half swollen shut eyelids. The sun is out! Summer is here! And I just hope everyone enjoys it as much as I do. Giới Từ Cách dùng Ví dụ in tháng in July; in September năm in 1985; in 1999 mùa in summer; in the summer of 69 buổi trong ngày in the morning; in the afternoon; in the evening khoảng thời gian in a minute; in two weeks at buổi trong ngày at night thời gian trong ngày at 6 o’clock; at midnight dịp lễ at Christmas; at Easter cụm từ cố định at the same time on ngày trong tuần on Sunday; on Friday ngày on the 25th of December* dịp lễ đặc biệt on Good Friday; on Easter Sunday; on my birthday buổi của 1 ngày đặc biệt on the morning of September the 11th* after muộn hơn cái gì đó after school ago điều gì đã xảy ra lâu rồi 6 years ago before sớm hơn cái gì đó before Christmas between thời gian chia làm 2 điểm between Monday and Friday by không muộn hơn một mốc thời gian nào đó. by Thursday during trong khoảng thời gian nào đó during the holidays for khoảng thời gian for three weeks from … to from… till/until từ 2 điểm của 1 quá trình from Monday to Wednesday from Monday till Wednesday from Monday until Wednesday past thời gian trong ngày 23 minutes past 6 623 since mốc thời gian since Monday till/until không muộn hơn một mốc cố định nào đó. till tomorrow until tomorrow to thời gian trong ngày 23 minutes to 6 537 up to không nhiều hơn một khoảng thời gian nào đó up to 6 hours a day within trong khoảng thời gian nào đó within a day

on summer hay in summer