Examples of Hayland in a sentence
Pasture and HaylandThe County may compensate a landowner for hay or pasture disturbance as follows, at the discretion of the Public Works Department:• Pasture - at current market pasture lease rate in the area of the project, plus 20% per acre.• Loss of pasture may be compensated by payment of up to three (3) years of loss of use, in order to compensate for forage re-establishment which may include temporary fencing.• Hayland- at current market price of hay plus 20% per ton.
Seeding and fertilizer rates shall be in accordance with the specifica- tions contained in USDA-NRCS-IOWA, Field Office Technical Guide, Section IV, Code No. 512, Pas- ture and Hayland Planting, August 1990.
Planting SEC 13 - Pasture and Hayland Planting Definition - Establishing and reestablishing long-term stands of adapted species of perennial, biennial, or reseeding forage plants.
Hayland and pasture occur on the hillsides as well as the ridgetops.
That paragraph states that making such estimates is potentially more difficult when retrospectively applying an accounting policy because of the period of time that might have passed since the transaction or event being measured.
Jones and Hayland (2008) argue that the success or failure of implementing guidelines may be associated with the interactions between several factors such as the type of the implemented practice, the nature of the institution, the respectability of the ICU practitioners to reforming their practice, and the clinical features of the ICU patients (Jones and Heyland 2008).
Priority 4: Pasture, Hay-land and Pasture:Provide administrative assistance to NRCS on USDA/Farm Bill programsPromote and provide information to improve control of noxious weeds on both public and private lands in cooperation with county weed supervisor.Evaluate water conservation opportunities of sprinkler irrigation versus flood irrigation.
Hayland is considered cropland if it is in rotation with row crops during the 5-year life span of the grass filter strip.
The pilot round of funding from the Catalysing Stalled Sites fund has approved £300,000 of grants and loans, including a £200,000 loan to Hayland Developments to help with the costs of pre-development work on Ivyhouse Lane Industrial Estate in Hastings which will create 45,000 sq.
Hayland and pastureland were the 40- and 50-year-old bermuda- grass and tall fescue systems, respectively, described in Contrast 3.