FOOT ROT SHEAR - ROT SHEAR

Foot Rot Shear - Pink Hair Cutting Shears - Mpeg Audio Scissors 1.4.

Foot Rot Shear


foot rot shear
    foot rot
  • Foot rot, or infectious pododermatitis, is a hoof infection that is commonly found in sheep, goat, and cattle. As the name suggests, it rots away the foot of the animal, more specifically the area between the two toes of the affected animal. It is extremely painful and contagious.
  • contagious degenerative infection of the feet of hoofed animals (especially cattle and sheep)
  • plant disease in which the stem or trunk rots at the base
  • A bacterial disease of the feet in hoofed animals, esp. sheep
  • Any of a number of fungal diseases of plants in which the base of the stem rots
    shear
  • A strain in the structure of a substance produced by pressure, when its layers are laterally shifted in relation to each other
  • cut with shears; "shear hedges"
  • (physics) a deformation of an object in which parallel planes remain parallel but are shifted in a direction parallel to themselves; "the shear changed the quadrilateral into a parallelogram"
  • fleece: shear the wool from; "shear sheep"

Friends? I think not.
Friends?  I think not.
Best viewed on black. The site of the 11th century Thurnham Castle is managed by Kent County Council with help of three Soay sheep. The Soay are a primitive breed that were first domesticated by Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age farmers. They survived on St Kilda Islands (the westernmost islands of the Outer Hebrides). In 1932 with the breed in decline a flock of 107 Soays were rounded up and moved onto the main island of Hirta and today their descendents are found all over the world. With little human contact these shy but hardy animals are excellent conservation animals, being content with small amounts of poor grazing, scrub and weeds in woodland and on hillsides. Being a primitive breed, their tails do not need docking. They do not suffer from foot rot and do not need shearing as they naturally shed their wool.
Thurnham Castle
Thurnham Castle
The site of the 11th century Thurnham Castle is managed by Kent County Council with help of three Soay sheep. The Soay are a primitive breed that were first domesticated by Neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age farmers. They survived on St Kilda Islands (the westernmost islands of the Outer Hebrides). In 1932 with the breed in decline a flock of 107 Soays were rounded up and moved onto the main island of Hirta and today their descendents are found all over the world. With little human contact these shy but hardy animals are excellent conservation animals, being content with small amounts of poor grazing, scrub and weeds in woodland and on hillsides. Being a primitive breed, their tails do not need docking. They do not suffer from foot rot and do not need shearing as they naturally shed their wool.

foot rot shear
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