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Coffee Shop
speaking of old pharts, a question...
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<blockquote data-quote="Suzie Q" data-source="post: 763957" data-attributes="member: 14334"><p>That is the idea Lammie. You piss the hen off so much that she doesn't want to sit any more and goes back to laying eggs.</p><p></p><p>I think you are referring to what we call a hessian bag. I used to use them to put on underneath a rug if the horse was wet. The hessian soaks up the water and then comes out and the horse is dry with a rug on. </p><p></p><p>We used to get lucerne chaff in them. I have heard that you do not feed chaff is that true? We don't getr them in hessian bags any more. Big plastic bags now.</p><p></p><p>We still have a clothes line. We hand up our clothes soaking wet to drip dry. Then they don't have to be ironed. My mum hasn't ironed since before I was born and I have never ironed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Suzie Q, post: 763957, member: 14334"] That is the idea Lammie. You piss the hen off so much that she doesn't want to sit any more and goes back to laying eggs. I think you are referring to what we call a hessian bag. I used to use them to put on underneath a rug if the horse was wet. The hessian soaks up the water and then comes out and the horse is dry with a rug on. We used to get lucerne chaff in them. I have heard that you do not feed chaff is that true? We don't getr them in hessian bags any more. Big plastic bags now. We still have a clothes line. We hand up our clothes soaking wet to drip dry. Then they don't have to be ironed. My mum hasn't ironed since before I was born and I have never ironed. [/QUOTE]
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speaking of old pharts, a question...
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