- and it may then be
plucked by hand
without cutting – this is
known as
rooing.
Individual sheep may
reach this
stage at
slightly different times. Whatever...
- tail. It has
horns in both ****es and a
fleece that is
usually moulted or
rooed (plucked)
rather than
needing shearing. All
Castlemilk Moorits are descended...
- many can have
their wool
plucked out by hand in a
process called "
rooing".
Rooing helps to
leave behind the co****
fibers called kemps which are still...
-
tails and
naturally shed
their wool,
which can be hand
plucked (called
rooing) in the
spring and
early summer.
About one
kilogram of wool can be obtained...
-
Australian Wool classing).
Clipping –
cutting off the wool: see
shearing and
rooing.
Comeback – the
progeny of a
mating of a
Merino with a
British longwool...
- the
Akanbee and
later impressing the
mayor with her dish. 11 10 "Shrink-a-
Rooed!" / "The
Pretty Cure Have Shrunk~!?" Transliteration: "Purikyua ga Chīsaku...
- patterns. Some
types moult naturally in spring,
allowing their fleece to be
rooed (plucked)
rather than shorn. Twin
births are frequent, with some (such as...
- He
recorded the
following notes about Al Ruwais,
which he
referred to as
Rooes: "The
centre tower of
Rooese is in lat. 26° 8' 25" N., long. 51° 18' 50"...
- with the
vicar James Bingham since, in 1778, he had been
cited (as John
Rooe {sic}, basket-maker) for non-payment of tithes,
together with
Thomas Hinde...
- Sir
Francis Roe,
alias Rooe (c. 1570-1620), was an English-born
infantry officer who
served in
Ireland during the Nine Years' War,
obtained grants of land...