Cranberries grow in bogs and marshes
Maine provides all those wonderful foods. The blueberries are wild, smaller and tastier than cultivated varieties by far. The lobsters and clams are especially good from the cold Atlantic waters. Cranberries are less prevalent, though. Massachusetts provides all these as well, and has a significant commercial crop of cranberries, they have mostly the cultivated blueberries. All New England states on the coast have lobsters, clams and blueberries, but not many also produce cranberries.
Yes Cranberries are grown in Alaska
They all grow on land, but cranberries grow in very boggy ground
Since 1995, Wisconsin has produced the largest crop of cranberries - currently, about 57% of the United States' total production.
Although it could be technically feasible to grow cranberries in northern and north eastern France, it is not economically realistic (higher costs, lower expected output). Hence France could grow cranberries, but does not.
A vine.
Yes.
yes
on a vine
no.they grow in cranberry field
bog