For what it is worth, sometimes the issue on deer poop isn't volume but
rather presense.
From a previous life, I remember a year of over wintered grain/deer
poop. Feed barley went into ships that met specifications. Over the time
at sea, deer poop (lighter than grain) floated to the top of the hold in the
ship. So the first thing a buyer saw when they cracked holds at their port
was a layer of deer poop. Not the end of the world but still visible and a
reason for the buyer to complain.
Perhaps a result of this experience is the reason to match what you have
in the bin with customers. Feed grain with some level of deer poop -
best in the domestic market. Stuff loaded at port for export. No deer
crap - can have light weight and other issues but again no deer crap.
Only other comment is that once deer crap (pardon me poop) gets into an
elevator and terminal, it starts to appear everywhere unless you are
extremely good on keeping things like bins/legs clean.
rather presense.
From a previous life, I remember a year of over wintered grain/deer
poop. Feed barley went into ships that met specifications. Over the time
at sea, deer poop (lighter than grain) floated to the top of the hold in the
ship. So the first thing a buyer saw when they cracked holds at their port
was a layer of deer poop. Not the end of the world but still visible and a
reason for the buyer to complain.
Perhaps a result of this experience is the reason to match what you have
in the bin with customers. Feed grain with some level of deer poop -
best in the domestic market. Stuff loaded at port for export. No deer
crap - can have light weight and other issues but again no deer crap.
Only other comment is that once deer crap (pardon me poop) gets into an
elevator and terminal, it starts to appear everywhere unless you are
extremely good on keeping things like bins/legs clean.
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