arable造句(1) Most of the farmers grow arable crops.
(2) The terrain changed quickly from arable land to desert.
(3) He farmed 200 acres of prime arable land.
(4) Arable land was such and such a percent.
(5) Good arable farmers grubbed them up.
(6) The small village centre is surrounded by arable farms.
(7) The support policy favours big arable farmers.
(8) Part of the arable soil still lies fallow.
(9) Under the latter system arable land was put under grass for a long period after which it was returned to arable.
(10) These basic land uses of arable, pasture and meadow were, of course, supplemented at different times.
(11) How much land must you commit to arable rotation, and how much must be laid up for hay or silage?
(12) Now they use them for arable cash crops and special market garden crops.
(13) Moreover, the arable land is more suited to collective as opposed to subsistence farming.
(14) Conflicting views' Of course arable land in some places is going out of cultivation because of erosion and other destructive forces.
(15) Most arable farmers are nothing more than basic commodity producers.
(16) He had nearly a thousand acres of grazing and arable land.
(17) The soil proved too infertile to sustain real pasture or arable crops.
(18) It may be strip-grazed behind an electric fence, cut and carted to the cattle-yard, or made into arable silage.
(19) Arable Enterprises Grassland predominated in the 4,770 hectares of arable ground accounting for 83% of this acreage.
(20) In early times, farmers were expected to grow a quarter acre of flax for one acre of arable land.
(21) Organic manures as nutrient sources-how best to make the most of organic manures and slurry in arable crop rotations.
(22) So far John and Jenny Redwood have undertaken their aid work while still running their dairy, arable and fruit farm.
(23) The hedgerows and pasture where the owls hunt their prey are disappearing as farmers create bigger fields for intensive arable farming.
(24) Accountants Touche Ross estimated that the increase in the price of diesel would add about £1 an acre to arable farming costs.
(25) These were in contrast to upland permanent pasture, where arable farming could only be undertaken infrequently, in special circumstances.
(26) These show since 1939 a more than twofold increase in arable land and a corresponding decline in permanent pasture.
(27) Of all counties the one most affected by the transformation of the open arable fields was Northamptonshire.
(28) Each family is provided with 3.5 ha of land of which 1 ha is used for rain-fed arable crops.
(29) By the 1930s only two thirds of the island's arable land were under cultivation and only half of that was irrigated.
(30) The Thatcher government has opposed planning controls over agriculture that could have stopped the spread of intensive arable farming.