28 gramos = 1 onza, pues 50 gramos = poquito menos de 2 onzas
Suponiendo que te refiereres a las onzas estadounidenses, 50 gramos equivalen a 1.76 onzas.
Roy Hay is 50 years old (birthdate: August 12, 1961).
Yes, hay is a staple of the domesticated horse's diet. Fed only on high quality hay, an average horse might eat about 50 pounds of hay per day.
50 bales
A tractor capable of lifting at least 2,000 pounds is best for moving round bales of hay. It would probably take a horsepower rating of about 40 or 50.
Hay 50 estados en los E.E.U.U. con 48 adyecentes y dos no. Estos que no lo son serían Alaska y Hawaii.
about 3-4 flakes depending on the crop of hay This really depends on the hay quality, cutting of hay, species of forages in the hay and the baler. I've had 80 # bales with 20 flakes in a bale and others with 5 flakes. the same baler with the same settings can also have bales weighing from 50# to 100#. The best thing to do is take a representative sampling from the bales, weigh them and weigh individual flake and take an average.
Prices varied by where you lived, and hay was cheaper in the country than in town, since it didn't have to be shipped in most cases. The average price for a 125 pound bale of hay was about ten cents, though it could go up to 50 cents or more in town in the winter.
Depending on the size of the bale and type of fodder in the bale, usually somewhere between 50 and 2,000 pounds.
16 oz = 1 lb 90 oz = 90/16 = 5.625 pounds per bag 50/5.625 = 8.9 bags
It depends on the size of the bale and type of fodder in the bale. Usually somewhere between 50 and 2,000 pounds.
Not much. Goats are browsers, not grazers, and prefer brush, hay, etc. Sheep are the clearers.