Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. Subject to disclaimers.: You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
A Valais Blackneck billy Engraving of a Valais Blackneck from the Journal des Eleveurs, 1905. The Valais Blackneck is a Swiss breed of domestic goat from the canton of Valais.It is distributed in southern Switzerland – the largest concentration is in the area of Visp (Viège) – and in neighbouring areas of northern Italy; it is present in modest numbers in Austria and Germany.
The white-on-black rendition of the sigil of Baphomet associated with the Church of Satan. The sigil of Baphomet is a sigil of the material world, representing carnality and earthly principles.
Near Llanfachraeth, on Anglesey. The British Alpine is a British breed of dairy goat bred in the early twentieth century. It is black with white Swiss markings on the face.. The foundation stock included a nanny with this colouration acquired in Paris in 1903 and goats of other breeds, probably including the Swiss Grisons Striped and Toggenburg and the now-extinct Sundgau of Alsace, as well as ...
An Erzgebirge goat and kid. The Erzgebirge (German: Erzgebirgsziege) is a breed of goat native to the Saxony region of Germany. [1] [2] Erzgebirge goats are polled, and have a reddish-brown coat with black stripes on the face, back, and legs. [3] Primarily used for milking, the breed is critically endangered. [4] [5]
GOAT, which stands for "Greatest Of All Time," is the ultimate compliment of all compliments. While the acronym can be applied to describe any Decoded: What GOAT means and how to use it
Black Bengal goat. The Black Bengal is a type of goat found in various regions including Bangladesh, West Bengal, Assam, and Odisha. [1] These goats typically have black skin and fur, although they can also be brown, white, or gray. The Black Bengal goat is small in size but its body structure is tight. Its horns are small and legs are short.
The average milk yield per lactation of the Nera Verzasca was measured in 2003 at 185 litres for primiparous, 318 litres for secondiparous, and 365 litres for pluriparous, nannies; [3] a study in 2008–10 found an average yield of 373 litres in 208 days, with an average of 3.50% fat and 3.06% protein. [7]