News
Sheep have been hired to eat invasive plants on Governors Island. They're feasting on phragmite and mugwort to help preserve the trees of Hammock Grove. More from News Sheep have been hired to eat ...
From sheep grease to soil fungi, Exmoor is rewriting the rainforest restoration rulebook – and it’s as brilliantly bizarre as ...
Restoration work by St. Andrews Links Trust has seen a range of steps taken to safeguard the golf courses and surrounding ...
Farmer Aidan Mullins said he has 'major relief' after his fencing that was destroyed by fallen trees has since been repaired ...
talker on MSN10d
Five lambs born to same ewe in ‘one in a million’ oddsThe rare birth, with odds estimated at one in a million, marks the first time five healthy lambs have been born to a single ...
In a major project that involves tens of thousands of tonnes of sand, thousands of Christmas trees and a flock of hardy Hebridean sheep, the St Andrews Links Trust has been rebuilding the dunes ...
Trees were felled for charcoal until the 19th century. Sheep Settlers brought cattle and pigs too, but then the climate turned colder for 500 years, and long-haired sheep became the mainstay.
The dealer received a welcome update this week from Galway sheep farmer Aidan Mullins who had fencing works completed on a ...
St. Andrews is to use a mix of rare-breed sheep, more than 31,000 tons of sand and 6,500 Christmas trees to protect the Home of Golf from coastal erosion. The work is being done as part of its ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results