View allAll Photos Tagged animalfeed
A field of corn on a Mennonite Farm located off of Highway 101 East in Black River Matheson Taylor Township in Northeastern Ontario Canada
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Found an old 1909 newspaper ad that stated: Manufactures of Chickmicks - The King of all feeds for horses and mules and stock of all kinds. Located at 1215 Hardy on the Texas & New Orleans Railroad. 5th Ward.
Built prior to 1909 and demolished in 2017.
LARGE view for most joy please.
Have you shared joy by posting a fine foto in Orange/Red this fun week? Please do your part, even if it is just the ART of a tomato carved into a HEART, CUCUMBER, etc.
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www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/m/mark_twain.html
Mark Twain , USA Philosophizing Writer Quotes
Born November 30, 1835; Died April 21, 1910
As an example to others, and not that I care for moderation myself, it has always been my rule never to smoke when asleep, and never to refrain from smoking when awake.
Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint.
Be careless in your dress if you will, but keep a tidy soul.
Better a broken promise than none at all.
Biographies are but the clothes and buttons of the man. The biography of the man himself cannot be written.
A shot from last Monday night , two images bended together ,
Beside the river Adur , I spotted this lovely tree a while back and thought with the sun in the right spot it may be good for a sunset, and must say I am happy with the result.
Aerial photograph of the British Sugar factory, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk — one of only four remaining sugar beet processing plants still operating in the UK. Opened in the late 1920s, it has grown into a vast, highly efficient industrial complex, handling over two million tonnes of beet every year during the autumn and winter campaign. The factory produces around a quarter of a million tonnes of refined sugar annually, together with valuable by-products including animal feed, lime for agriculture, and bioethanol.
The six tall silos store tens of thousands of tonnes of finished sugar, while the circular tanks and clarifiers handle beet juice and wastewater treatment. The surrounding lagoons and settling ponds are part of the site’s environmental management system. Steam billows from the main chimney as part of the energy recovery process — much of the plant’s heat is recycled to improve efficiency.
British Sugar’s Bury St Edmunds site plays a vital role in East Anglia’s long-standing beet industry, supporting hundreds of local farmers and marking nearly a century of continuous production.
You might have seen Anja before
www.flickr.com/photos/145093364@N08/35983802880/in/datepo...
But here we are right in the middle of our local THC-free weed field.
Follow her on Instagram:
instagram.com/anja.0711
EXPLORE # 349 - 15.05.2013
Because the rapeseed in the foreground had seeded and grown slightly away from the rest of the field, I was able to capture the beautiful flower. It was a blustery day but none-the-less I was able to catch some detail.
But one flower alone could not produce the animal feed and vegetable oil for human consumption – it takes fields upon fields of the stuff to make the produce which is needed.
Sometimes standing alone and counting the cost is good, other times we need to unite with others to
make a difference.
Psalm 133 v 1
How wonderful and pleasant it is when brothers live together in harmony!
WESTERN MORNING VIEW in the Western Morning News 03/09/2011.
Rapeseed fields near Looe in Cornwall. The coast and country are both so easily accessible in all parts of Cornwall. The cows quickly moved in to eat the freshly mowed hay. The farmer stopped to chat to me and said he was just taking the top off and it will grow up thicker. He was happy to natter and my shopping was defrosting in the car! I cannot miss a photo opportunity. Ha Ha.
One Raw file tone-mapped in Photomatix and tweaked in Gimp. Taken with Tamron 70-300mm lens. I chose the more painterly effect for this photo as there was very little colour in the foreground grass and it looked quite dull.
Check my photos on Flickriver link below.
Aerial view of the British Sugar factory, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk — one of only four remaining sugar beet processing plants still operating in the UK. Opened in the late 1920s, it has grown into a vast, highly efficient industrial complex, handling over two million tonnes of beet every year during the autumn and winter campaign. The factory produces around a quarter of a million tonnes of refined sugar annually, together with valuable by-products including animal feed, lime for agriculture, and bioethanol.
The six tall silos store tens of thousands of tonnes of finished sugar, while the circular tanks and clarifiers handle beet juice and wastewater treatment. The surrounding lagoons and settling ponds are part of the site’s environmental management system. Steam billows from the main chimney as part of the energy recovery process — much of the plant’s heat is recycled to improve efficiency.
British Sugar’s Bury St Edmunds site plays a vital role in East Anglia’s long-standing beet industry, supporting hundreds of local farmers and marking nearly a century of continuous production.
From my set entitled “Escarpment” (under development)
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/sets/72157608204080206/
In my collection entitled “Halton”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/collections/7215760820...
In my photostream
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/
Reproduced from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niagara_Escarpment
The Niagara Escarpment is a long escarpment, or cuesta, in the United States and Canada that runs westward from New York State, through Ontario, Michigan, Wisconsin and Illinois. It is composed of the Lockport geological formation of Silurian age, and is similar to the Onondaga geological formation, which runs parallel to it and just to the south, through the western portion of New York and southern Ontario. The escarpment is most famous as the cliff over which the Niagara River plunges to form Niagara Falls, for which it is named.
The Niagara Escarpment is the most prominent of several escarpments formed in the bedrock of the Great Lakes. It is traceable from its easternmost point in New York State, starting well east of the Genesee River Valley near Rochester, creating one large and two small waterfalls on the Genesee River in that city, thence running westwards to the Niagara River forming a deep gorge north of Niagara Falls, which itself cascades over the escarpment. In Southern Ontario it stretches along the Niagara Peninsula hugging close to the Lake Ontario shore near the cities of St. Catharines and Hamilton and Milton where it takes a sharp turn north toward Georgian Bay. It then follows the Georgian Bay shore northwestwards to form the spine of the Bruce Peninsula, Manitoulin, St. Joseph Island and other islands located in northern Lake Huron where it turns westerwards into the Upper Peninsula of northern Michigan, south of Sault Ste. Marie. It then extends southwards into Wisconsin following the Door Peninsula and then more inland from the western coast of Lake Michigan and Milwaukee ending northwest of Chicago near the Wisconsin-Illinois border.
In February 1990, the Niagara Escarpment was designated a World Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO, making it one of 12 in Canada. Development and land use adjacent to the escarpment is regulated and the biosphere protected by the Niagara Escarpment Commission, an agency of the Ontario government.