yes. Lots of corn is grown in the Salt Lake City area. Other popular local crops are tomatoes, peaches, strawberries, raspberries, grapes, cucumbers, squash, and pumpkins.
No. Salt affects the uptake of water to any plant so it cannot make corn grow faster.
Stewart L. Grow has written: 'A tabernacle in the desert' -- subject(s): Tabernacle (Salt Lake City, Utah)
No, corn cannot grow in salt water as it requires fresh water for its growth. Salt water can inhibit the ability of plants to take up necessary nutrients and water, ultimately causing them to die. Corn is a freshwater plant and needs to be cultivated in soil with low salinity levels for optimal growth.
When the Mormon Pioneers arrived in the Salt Lake Valley, there was nothing except for a bunch of dirt, sagebrush, and a salty lake. It is rumored that a fur trapper laughed at them when he found they intended to settle there and said that it would be impossible to grow anything that could sustain life.
no but you can grow corn....
Yes, you can plant a corn kernel to grow corn.
Yes, you can grow corn from store-bought corn. The kernels from store-bought corn can be planted in soil to grow new corn plants.
crops do you means like corn well here are some (corn etc almost every thing)
Corn needs large plots of land to be economically viable as a crop, so it is not grown commercially in any cities.
Sinaloa is the state with the largest production of corn in Mexico. Its capital Culiacan is also close to the most productive corn fields in such country.
Yes, you can plant fresh corn kernels to grow corn.
I suppose you could say the Mormon Trail ended in Salt Lake City, but from there it split into smaller trails. Most Mormon Pioneers arriving in Salt Lake City didn't stay there for very long - they would be sent to colonize or work in other small communities throughought the west. This was needed for survival, as the resources they needed for survivial could not all be found in one place. Some moved south to grow cotton and raise silk worms, others moved to more fertile land for farming, and others moved to ranching, logging, or mining communities. Salt Lake City was mostly for manufacturing and industry.