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  2. Vegetable farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_farming

    Several economic models exist for vegetable farms: A relatively small operation is a market garden while a larger farm may grow large quantities of few vegetables and sell them in bulk to major markets or middlemen, which requires large growing operations. A farm may produce for local customers, which requires a larger distribution effort.

  3. Grant Woods (biologist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grant_Woods_(biologist)

    Grant R. Woods (born 1961) [1] is an American biologist specializing in white tail deer and associated land management that increases deer populations, primarily for hunting purposes. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Personal

  4. Wood industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_industry

    In the narrow sense of the terms, wood, forest, forestry and timber/lumber industry appear to point to different sectors, in the industrialized, internationalized world, there is a tendency toward huge integrated businesses that cover the complete spectrum from silviculture and forestry in private primary or secondary forests or plantations via the logging process up to wood processing and ...

  5. Agricultural fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_fencing

    Deer and many goats can easily jump an ordinary agricultural fence, and so special fencing is needed for farming goats or deer, or to keep wild deer out of farmland and gardens. Deer fence is often made of lightweight woven wire netting nearly 2 metres (6 feet 7 inches) high on lightweight posts, otherwise made like an ordinary woven wire fence.

  6. Growbag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growbag

    A growbag is a planter filled with a growing medium and used for growing plants, usually tomatoes or other salad crops. Originally made of plastic, modern bags are also made from jute or fabric. The growing medium is usually based on a soilless organic material such as peat , coir , composted green waste , composted bark or composted wood chips ...

  7. Animal feed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_feed

    Traditional sources of animal feed include household food scraps and the byproducts of food processing industries such as milling and brewing. Material remaining from milling oil crops like peanuts, soy, and corn are important sources of fodder. Scraps fed to pigs are called slop, and those fed to chicken are called chicken scratch.

  8. Farm gate value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farm_gate_value

    The farm gate value of a cultivated product in agriculture and aquaculture [1] is the market value of a product minus the selling costs (transport costs, marketing costs). [2] ...

  9. Hügelkultur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hügelkultur

    Hügelkultur bed prior to being covered with soil. Hügelkultur is a German word meaning mound culture or hill culture. [3] Though the technique is alleged to have been practiced in German and Eastern European societies for hundreds of years, [1] [4] the term was first published in a 1962 German gardening booklet by Herrman Andrä. [5]