If you’re carving a jack-o’-lantern, don’t throw away the skin or innards — every part is edible.
WCNC-TV Charlotte on MSN
How to donate used jack-o’-lanterns to feed local farm animals
The Only Way To Tell When a Watermelon is Ripe, According to a Farmer Trump White House limits reporters’ access to staff ...
Only In Your State on MSN
Sleep in a Gorgeous Barn and Greet Mini Farm Animals at This Idaho Airbnb
I never grew up on a farm, but I married a farmboy from northern Utah. Whenever we visit his family, we are also greeted by ...
Caring for an exotic pet like a turtle can be a challenge for even the most thoughtful pet parent, but the challenges only ...
MyTwinTiers.com on MSN
Farm Sanctuary gives turkeys their own Thanksgiving
Farm Sanctuary continues to put its own twist for Thanksgiving by feeding its turkeys a big meal on Nov. 1. Farm Sanctuary adopts and takes care of animals on its farm, ...
CELINA - This year, don't let pumpkins and jack o' lanterns haunt the graveyards of garbage. Instead, turn the tricks into treats by recycling the whole pumpkin - guts and all. Feeding farm ...
Only In Your State on MSN
3 New Hampshire Tourist Spots I Tried to Hate (But Ended Up Loving)
I was skeptical about visiting these places due to their popularity, but are these must-see attractions in New Hampshire ...
Only In Your State on MSN
This Gorgeous 1.5-Mile Hike in Acadia National Park is Worth the Sweat
Well, these oddly named landmarks reside in Acadia National Park (although, Bubbles National Park does have a fun ring to it) ...
Every year, more than a billion pounds of pumpkins end up in U.S. landfills after Halloween, releasing methane as they ...
Trade talks and a deal with China have resumed sales of American soybeans, which is good news for local soybean farmers. Farmers, who have been plagued with problems from weather to low crop yields ...
15hon MSN
Black vultures attack and kill cattle. Climate change is one reason they're spreading north
Black vultures have killed and eaten several calves on Tom Karr’s cattle ranch in southeastern Ohio, a loss he says didn't happen two decades ago. Now it happens regularly.
Anthony DeNicola, standing outside the feral hog trap he invented, looks at the animals he killed at this cattle farm in Greenwood, South Carolina, in February. Traps, which help ensure the pigs can ...
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