Plural of haulm; the stems or stalks of grain crops like barley or oats, especially after the grain has been harvested.
From Middle English 'haume' or 'halme,' from Old English 'healm,' related to Old Saxon 'halm' meaning straw or stem. The word originally referred to any dry grass or straw used for bedding or fuel.
Before modern harvesting machines, farmers carefully saved haulms because they were incredibly useful—burned for warmth, used for thatching roofs, or fed to animals as winter fodder. Nothing went to waste!
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