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  2. Stock and station agency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_and_station_agency

    Stock refers to livestock, its purchase and sale. Station refers to a facility equipped with special equipment and personnel for a particular purpose—in this case in Australasia—for pastoral industry, see Australia: Stations and New Zealand: Stations. The same word was used for a defensible residence constructed on the American frontier ...

  3. Agriculture in Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Pennsylvania

    A farmstead in Perry Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania.. Agriculture is a major industry in the U.S. commonwealth of Pennsylvania. [1] As of the most recent United States Census of Agriculture conducted in 2017, there were 53,157 farms in Pennsylvania, covering an area of 7,278,668 acres (2,945,572 hectares) with an average size of 137 acres (55 hectares) per farm. [2]

  4. Cattle grid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattle_grid

    Cattle grid on country road. Cattle grids are usually installed on roads where they cross a fenceline, often at a boundary between public and private lands. [5] They are an alternative to the erection of gates that would need to be opened and closed when a vehicle passes, and are common where roads cross open moorland, rangeland or common land maintained by grazing, but where segregation of ...

  5. Bighorn Ditch Headgate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bighorn_Ditch_Headgate

    The 1891 Reno Ditch provided water to 4500 (later 12,500) Crow acres. The Bighorn Ditch allowed the expansion of agriculture and cattle ranching to 35,000 acres (140 km 2). As a result, the Crow no longer needed Federal food subsidies. [4] The Bighorn Ditch headgate was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on December 12, 1976. [1]

  6. Common land - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_land

    Right to pasture cattle, horses, sheep or other animals on the common land. The most widespread right. Piscary. Right to fish. Turbary. Right to take sods of turf for fuel. Common in the Soil. This is a general term used for rights to extract minerals such as sands, gravels, marl, walling stone and lime from common land. Mast or pannage.

  7. Livestock crush - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livestock_crush

    A cattle crush and an anti-bruise race in Australia. Chin (or neck) bar in operation during mouthing.. A cattle crush (in UK, New Zealand, Ireland, Botswana and Australia), squeeze chute (North America), cattle chute (North America), [1] [2] standing stock, or simply stock (North America, Ireland) is a strongly built stall or cage for holding cattle, horses, or other livestock safely while ...

  8. Ranch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranch

    The only actual "cattle drives" held on Long Island consisted of one drive in 1776, when the island's cattle were moved in a failed attempt to prevent them from being captured during the Revolutionary War, and three or four drives in the late 1930s, when area cattle were herded down Montauk Highway to pasture ground near Deep Hollow Ranch. [103]

  9. Cattle drives in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattle_drives_in_the...

    Cattle drives represented a compromise between the desire to get cattle to market as quickly as possible and the need to maintain the animals at a marketable weight. While cattle could be driven as far as 25 miles (40 km) in a single day, they would lose so much weight that they would be hard to sell when they reached the end of the trail.