Depends on type of grass and cut length when harvested.
10%
A buffalo or bison will typically eat 2.5% to 3% of its body weight in forage (on a dry-matter basis) per day.
Artificial grass can have the same look and feel as real grass but saves on water consumption. In dry areas this works really well. The cost however of artificial grass is much higher than real grass.
PCP is usually a rich green color when dry, green like the grass of your lawn rather than marijuana which is a lighter green when dry no matter the potency.
No, soap will kill grass and has no helpful qualities for dry grass.
A 500 kg bullock typically consumes about 2-3% of its body weight in dry matter daily. This equates to approximately 10-15 kg of dry matter per day, depending on factors such as the bullock's age, health, and activity level. The exact amount can vary based on the quality of the forage and the bullock's specific nutritional needs.
brown matter would be any dried plant materials like dry leaves, straw, dry grass. green matter would be grass clippings, kitchen scraps, vegetable and fruit peels, etc..
There is no separate dry tonne, there are just tonnes.One tonne is 1000 kilograms.
Dry grass looks yellow in colour because it has lost its moisture content.
1 pound of dry ice is equal to approximately 0.45 kilograms.
A dull mower blade will "tear" the grass instead of "cut" it. The jagged blades of grass will dry up and cause your lawn to look brownish or even yellowish - much like when cut grass clippings turn from green to brown/yellow as they dry up.
On average a cow will consume 2% of her body weight in dry matter per day. Grass is usually 85% water (hence 15% dry matter). Thus, the calculations are as follows: 400 kg x 0.02 = 8 kg DM 8 kg DM / 0.15 DM in grass = 53.33 kg of grass as-fed per day. Thus you can estimate a 400 kg cow may eat around 53 kg of grass per day.