We harvested the grassland again on the way and hung the grass to dry!

She drove back to the campsite around two o'clock. The car was loaded with wooden planks to build a fence, otherwise she would have no place to put the prizes she brought back!

He told the battalion commander to arrange for someone to fix the fence and drove back to the sports field.

There are still some details to be worked on, like changing rooms and a makeshift canteen. Food can wait a few days!

She calculated the livestock she needed: eighteen adult horses. She had chosen pregnant mares, the kind that would give birth in a few months after the troops returned the soldiers home. She also needed eighteen adult cows and donkeys, all of them pregnant.

Fifteen ponies, calves, and donkeys were needed, along with ninety geese and ducks. She figured the sheep would be more, probably around five hundred. She'd probably finish the fence by the time she got back, so she'd just pull a cart and figure it out. Looking at the playground, she felt incredibly proud. This was all her own creation.

At around four o'clock in the afternoon, Mo'er returned to the camp with eighteen mares on his cart, and then asked the soldiers to make a slope with wooden boards and place it next to the truck. The highest point of the slope was at the same height as the truck bed, so that the horses could walk down the slope!

A group of people arrived on the truck and asked Moer, "Comrade Li Moer, are these horses prizes? I think they're all pregnant mares!" Moer nodded and said, "Yes, they're all pregnant mares. Not just horses, but also cows and donkeys. So the top three soldiers will get two horses." In fact, Moer was afraid that if these horses, cows, and donkeys continued to give birth, the space would be full again after a while. What would he do then? Would he hold another event?

He had the soldiers drive the horses into the fenced area and then took some dry hay from the cart bed and threw it into the fence. The horses were used to eating grass and didn't even look at the dry hay. Mo'er didn't bother to care about them. It was their bad habits. If they were hungry, he'd see if they'd eat it.

In the evening, Mo'er harvested the grass again and hung it out to dry.

The animals regained their spirits. The peacocks, upon seeing Mo'er, opened their eyes. The colorful array was truly beautiful. Monkeys hopped up and down the hillside. The golden monkeys, however, were relatively quiet. They sat under a tree, eating peaches thrown by the monkeys.

Alpaca, zebras, and sika deer were playing with the donkeys on the grassland! The giraffes weren't on the grassland, having wandered off into the woods! Moer had dug a pit in each area for them to drink from, so they wouldn't have to run to the spiritual spring water bath in front of the cabin!

Looking at the rabbits all over the grassland, I started to worry again. These rabbits can't be used as prizes. I can only sell them out from time to time. I will release a batch into the wild tomorrow. Let the people nearby also get some!

Mo'er went to find the pure white pony. Now it can't be called a pony anymore, it's not much different from an adult horse!

It seems I need to go to Golmud Town to find a saddle or something, otherwise I won’t be able to ride! After playing with the white horse for a while, I went to pet the red and white fox and panda.

He used his mind to look at the fish in the two lakes. There were no dead fish, which meant that the spiritual spring water had some effect on them.

She caught some sesame swordfish and prepared to steam them that evening. The fish was incredibly delicious, and after eating it, her mouth was filled with the aroma of sesame. After leaving the space and cleaning the fish, her grandmother returned, and the mother and daughter prepared dinner together!

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