Deer typically enter gardens in late evening just before dark or early morning at the first signs of light. Deer eat a host of garden plants, including beans. Plants with the tops nipped off are usually the result of deer grazing in the garden. Look for deer tracks in the soil between the rows, as deer often walk up the row snapping off the tops of every plant in the row.
Commercial deer repellents, hanging aluminum foil from strings, soap bars hung from fences and chicken wire laid flat on the ground around the perimeter of the garden and covered with hay are all thought to repel deer. Each provides effective control for a short period, but deer typically ignore the repellent after a short time. Changing the repellent or the location provides continued relief. Fencing to create barrier is the most effective means of keeping deer from the garden.
Rabbits enter the garden in evenings and morning, but many are bold enough to enter during the day. Typically, rabbits nibble on the plants nearest the edges of the garden first and are more prevalent near bushes or shrubs, where they seek quick shelter when humans emerge. Rabbits may follow the row, but rarely eat the entire row in one night.
Two- to three-foot fences around the garden area may provide protection from rabbits, but a determined rabbit can dig under the fence. Human hair or dog hair tied up in small bags and hung around the perimeter of the garden is thought to repel rabbits. Hot pepper sauce applied to foliage may deter rabbits. Live traps used to capture rabbits and release them in another area provide an effective means of controlling rabbits.
Groundhogs, also referred to as woodchucks, are veracious eaters and devour bean plants quickly. An entire row may be eaten to within an inch or two of the ground overnight. These animals are quick and escape at the slightest noise. They feed in evenings and mornings, but often return during the day.
Mothballs or ammonia-soaked rags placed around the perimeter of the garden provide some protection from groundhogs. A four-foot hardware fence sunk into the ground to provide a 12- to 18-inch barrier under the ground offers protection from groundhogs, but caution must be exercised as they may climb the fence. Trapping and releasing groundhogs in a new area provides the most effective means of ridding your garden of groundhogs.
sheep eats coffee beans. That's how people discovered coffee beans.
worms
an animal that only eats meat is a carnivore, an animal the only eats vegetation is a herbivore and an animal that eats both is called an omnivore :)
The animal that eats slippery d*ck is me, and my friend
An animal that eats everything is called an omnivore, an animal that eats only meat is called carnivore, and lastly an animal that eats only vegetation is called a herbivore
Carnivore= animal that eats other animals Herbivore= animal that eats plants Omnivore= animal that eats both animals and plants ( humans)
A piscivorous animal is an animal that eats fish and only fish. Like an insectivore eats insects a piscicore eats fish.
There is not an animal credited with the discovery of coffee. The person who is believed to have discovered coffee was Kaldi who was a goat herder.
yes
This coffee is called Kopi Luwak. It is one of the most expensive types of coffee beans. The animal called civet is responsible for the popularity of this coffee.
The Palm Civet
Kopi luwak is the world’s most expensive coffee. The main factor of it’s high price is the uncommon method of producing such a coffee. It is produced from the coffee beans which have been digested by a certain Indonesian cat-like animal called then palm civet or also civet cat. This is the reason kopi luwak is also called cat poop coffee or civet cat coffee. The feces of this cat will be collected, finished and sold as kopi luwak. The coffee fruit is digested by the animal but the seed (or bean) passes through the animal undigested and is excreted in the feces.
It really depends on the type and brand. There is this one animal who eats coffee beans and you can use its droppings for coffee, it costs like $500 a pound or something. Yes, it is real. A kilo is 2.2 pounds. So if a pound of gourmet coffee beans is $6.99, then a kilo of coffee beans is $6.99 X 2.2 = $15.38.
Brewed coffee and regular coffee are the same thing.
The animal you're thinking of - is the Palm Civet (Paradoxurus). It doesn't actually produce the coffee - it eats the raw fruit of the coffee plant. The soft pulp of the fruit is digested, while the hard seed passes through the digestive system. The defecated seeds are collected and roasted in the same way as 'normal' coffee beans are.
coffee beans that have not been roasted.
No, the coffee grounds are removed from the coffee before drinking. You do not actually drink the beans.
Crushed coffee beans are called NIBS
No one invented coffee beans. A coffee bean is a seed of the coffee plant, and are found in the nature.