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"unstocked" Definitions
  1. not stocked: such as
  2. not equipped or provided with a stock
  3. not furnished with animals, fish, or livestock

21 Sentences With "unstocked"

How to use unstocked in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "unstocked" and check conjugation/comparative form for "unstocked". Mastering all the usages of "unstocked" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The company still has roughly 21.5 stores, which have at times been barren, unstocked by vendors who have lost their trust.
As Americans have fretted about quarantines and shortages, they've raided online and brick-and-mortar retailers, leaving shelves unstocked and warehouses short.
The shelves at some food banks are going unstocked Canned food donations are declining and one food bank in Stamford, Connecticut, can't keep its shelves stocked.
During increased tensions this year with heavily armed North Korea, Seoul has faced criticism over a lack of preparation for major emergencies, with many bomb shelters, for example, laying forgotten and unstocked with food or water.
Article continues after the video below Watch: Waypoint speaks to Nintendo's Reggie Fils-Aimé at E3 2017 But to leave them unstocked is to suffer in the field, as your town, your oasis in the middle of an otherwise pretty inhospitable desert, effectively has a happiness meter—and the higher that is, the more extra health points you (and your party of up to three) receive on leaving its sanctuary for exploration and combat.
The property was stocked with 2,000 cattle and 30 horses. Messrs Keogh and Rowe sold the unstocked property in 1924 to C. E. Tidswell. In 1938 Tidswell sold the property for £20,000 to G. H. Griffiths. It was stocked with 10,000 sheep at this time.
The entire area was affected by far more severe flooding in 1901, with the station reported as having been entirely swept away by the combined flood waters of the Georgina, Rankin and James Rivers. Brabazon and Co. bought the property in 1911. At this time the station had an estimated area of and was sold unstocked.
It is situated about north east of Tibooburra and west of Hungerford. The tender was accepted for the run named Caryapundy by J. C. Myers in 1872. Myers was also had his tenders accepted for other runs such as Bollwarry, Mount Wood, Teriwinda and Torrens Creek. In 1873 the unstocked property was put up for auction by the Minister of Lands.
Cox had a farm in Windsor, New South Wales. In 1854, he learned that made profits were made by selling stock, especially sheep, to New Zealand. In Sydney, he purchased two licences for unstocked grazing runs in South Canterbury from Muter and Francis. He met John Cracroft Wilson, who was in search of a healthier climate, and encouraged him to also settle in Canterbury.
A share in the property was sold by in 1881 to the De Salis brothers by Kilgour and Woodhouse. The property occupied an area of and was unstocked at the time. By 1883 Ernest Favenc sold his quarter share of the property now stocked with 2000 head of cattle to Brodie and De Salis. In 1895 Sidney North Innes in partnership with Mr. T.A. Perry purchased Cresswell Downs.
Established at some time prior to 1890 by Edward Goddard Blume, his paddocks were burnt out the same year with the loss of most feed and some fencing. The property was stocked with sheep, producing 68 bales of wool in 1892 and 71 in 1893. Blume sold Bexley in 1939 to T. Scanlan. Blume sold the completely unstocked but retained the Yanburra portion of the property for himself.
Floods in 1890 sent of water through the Bullamon Homestead residence and drowned 60,000 of the leasehold's 125,000 sheep. After the 1902 drought Bullamon was shut down and remained unstocked until seasonal conditions improved. Small resumptions were made in the 1890s and in 1904 a further 133 square miles was taken. In 1910 the St George Progress Association requested that the government resume all of Bullamon, much of which was thickly infested with prickly pear, for closer settlement.
Saltbush and bluebush pastures make up about 40% of the property with wanyu and Acacia bushland making up the . The station was established in the early 1880s when artesian water was drilled so large volumes were available to water stock. A shepherd for the station was advertised in 1882, and the owner of Wooramel in 1883 was John Winthrop Hackett. The unstocked station was put on the market in 1885, at which time it occupied an area of .
Probable Oreochromis variabilis male showing full breeding dress, from a fishpond at Njombe, Tanzania in January 2017. The species is listed as critically endangered by IUCN, with population declines attributed to the introduction of predatory Nile perch and competing non- native tilapias. However, populations continued to be reported from satellite lakes in the catchment which had remained unstocked with these exotics. More recently, in 2016, individuals were recorded on the rocky offshore island of Makobe in the Tanzanian part of the lake.
Beltana lies 240 m above sea level between the often dry Warrioota and Sliding Rock creeks near Mount Deception. Due to the flatness of the country, the town’s proximity to the creeks and the area’s usually unpredictable weather, heavy rainfall has often led to flooding. Beltana has experienced six months with no rain (1960–61) and six months with over 300 mm of rain (1975–76) and drought has caused the area to be unstocked for long periods (1903–09).Aird G 1984, p.
In 2006, Luke Johnson's Risk Capital Partners acquired the Scalzo brothers' controlling stake in the company. At the time of the acquisition, Luke Johnson said: The chain has expanded rapidly since 2006, growing from eight shops in 2006 to 192 as of May 2017. It opened its first shop in the Republic of Ireland in 2017, in Debenhams in Blanchardstown Centre. A selection of their cakes are now available in many Sainsbury's stores, also there is the option to buy online and collect personalised and unstocked items in-store.
George Hooper and E. A. Trenenny formed a partnership and acquired the station, then later sold it to the Queensland Government. The two later purchased Davenport Downs Station but had to relinquish it for financial reasons. In 1927 the government owned the station and sold it unstocked to company that still in the process of being formed for the reserve price of A £10,000. The Queensland Government purchased the property in 1992 and subsequently gazetted the property, capable of holding up to 12,000 head of cattle, as the Diamantina National Park.
The lease for Wellshot expired in 1948, so the New Zealand and Australian Land Company had to truck about 30,000 sheep from the property in readiness to allow the station to be cut up for closer settlement. Later the same year the station was hit by a storm and suffered significant damage from cyclonic gales and heavy hail. The manager, Mr MacIntyre, reported the hail tore holes in the iron roofs and was packed to a depth of one foot on the verandah. An unstocked homestead block on the station was sold for £35,000 in 1953.
They named it after the Isis River, a tributary of the Thames River, in England. The same group advertised the property for sale in 1872 when it was stocked with about 20,000 sheep. By 1877 a town was established not far from the station by William and James Whitman to support the local pastoral industry. To begin with the town was known as Whittown or Whittington but by 1897 was named Isisford. It was sold in 1873 for £17,067 to Messrs Govett and Thomson, Isis Downs North, 8 blocks of unstocked country to the north of the property was sold to Mr. Stevenson for £3750.
The result was the formation of a new proud farming proprietorship and the steady extinction of the dominant Anglo-Irish landed gentry. Whereas in 1870 only 3% of Irish farmers owned their land, by 1908, this jumped to nearly 50%. By the early 1920s, the figure was at 70%, the process being later completed. Despite some deficiencies of the Land Act, O'Brien could take some pride in its working since its passage. The social effects of the Act were immediate The year 1903 alone saw a 33% drop in reports of intimidation, a 70% decline in boycotting cases, 60% fewer people needing police protection, and a 50% decrease in the number and acreage of grazing farms unlet or unstocked because of agitation. In the period 1903 to 1909 over 200,000 small peasant tenant-farmers became "owneroccupiers" of their holdings under the Acts.
The traditional owners of the area are the Yaroinga peoples who inhabited around of country straddling both the Northern Territory and Queensland including Lake Nash toward the northern edge of their range. The station was established by John Costello, the son of Irish immigrants, who built the property up over the early years. Costello had acquired the property in 1879 from Mr F. Scar who had sold it unstocked. Costello began to stock the station later the same year when he had 700 head of mixed cattle overlanded from Carrawal where he had previously worked. Fattened cattle were taken overland to Adelaide for market in the 1880s. The area was subjected to severe flooding in 1901 when Lake Nash experienced over of rain in a single day, with the Georgina River running at almost record high levels. Costello sold the property in 1905. The area was inundated with of rain in 1909, enough to get all the rivers running and reopen closed stock routes. In 1915 the station was acquired by the Queensland National Pastoral Company which had been formed to take over the pastoral properties owned by the Queensland National Bank.

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