yes
A pueblo is basically a small town. It has a living quarters, a kitchen, a cemetery, a fountain, a church, a farm, and even it's own walls!
The Pueblo people lived in a dry and arid desert climate in the Southwestern United States. They adapted to this environment by building their communities in cliffs and canyons and developing sophisticated irrigation systems to farm in the arid landscape.
The Inuit were traditionally hunters and fishers and gatherers. It is very difficult to do any farming in the far north where they live. The Kwakiutl did not farm for food but may have grown some tobacco and other Northwest coastal people did things to encourage the plants they wanted to grow. The Lakota grew corn but with the coming of the horse they farmed less and less. The Pueblo and Iroquois were agricultural people.
The Pueblo Indians are not thought to be related to the Hohokam just the Anasazi, Sinagua and Mogollon. The modern Pueblo dry land farm like the Anasazi especially in the western Pueblos. They grow the same crops but added ones that were brought by the Spanish like peaches and melons. In the eastern Pueblos they irrigated their farms which is similar to the Hohokam but not the same and not not thought to be related. They have the same housing patterns, the same pottery styles, the same weaving of cotton. The kachina cult is thought to have started among the Anasazi at the end of their time and continues among the Pueblo.
They lived, for the most part, in a hot and dry climate. Some, such as the pueblo tribes and Navajo live in a cold dert climate that can get hot in the summer and quite cold in the winter.
The word "Navajo" comes from a Spanish adaptation of the Tewa Pueblo word navahu'u, meaning "farm fields in the valley." They were called Apache de Nabajo meaning "the apache group that farms". Navajo are cousins of the Apache. Some of the words are still similar between the two. Tewa are a neighboring Pueblo indian group. Dine' means "people"
Many Native American tribes used irrigation. Two of the largest were the Cherokee of the east coast and the Hohokam of the American Southwest (Phoenix area).
Oh, dude, the climate for the Pueblo Indians is like, pretty diverse. They live in the southwestern United States, so you've got your hot summers and cool winters. It's not like they're living in Antarctica or anything, but they definitely get a taste of all the seasons.
A rancho is typically a ranch or farm, often focused on livestock and agriculture, and was common in the Spanish and Mexican colonial periods in the Americas. In contrast, a pueblo refers to a type of settlement or community, usually with a focus on residential life, and is associated with Native American cultures, particularly in the Southwestern United States. While both terms relate to land use, ranchos emphasize agricultural production, whereas pueblos emphasize community and habitation.
Farm products- depends on the farm your talking about; such as, fruit farm, nut farm, or just a plain old animal farm. or the farm could just be for the enjoyment.
farm & fleet is a privately owned fleet farm
The Pueblo Indians are not thought to be related to the Hohokam just the Anasazi, Sinagua and Mogollon. The modern Pueblo dry land farm like the Anasazi especially in the western Pueblos. They grow the same crops but added ones that were brought by the Spanish like peaches and melons. In the eastern Pueblos they irrigated their farms which is similar to the Hohokam but not the same and not not thought to be related. They have the same housing patterns, the same pottery styles, the same weaving of cotton. The kachina cult is thought to have started among the Anasazi at the end of their time and continues among the Pueblo.