Cranberries grow in bogs and marshes
Yes Cranberries are grown in Alaska
Vines can grow on houses, particularly ivy or kudzu.
They all grow on land, but cranberries grow in very boggy ground
they grow on vines
Cranberries are grown on vines in Northern Europe and in parts of the northern United States. They are harvested during September and October and available fresh up to Christmas
Climbing vines are vines that will grow up a trellis or the side of a house if left to grow unchecked. Some examples of climbing vines include kudzu and ivy.
ivory vines are vines that grow very long that animals eat
Cranberries grow on long-running vines in acidic, sandy bogs and marshes, mostly in the northeast United States, but also in Wisconsin and the Pacific Northwest. Native American used crushed cranberries to preserve food throughout the winter. They also used cranberries as medicine and dye. In 1620, English settlers at Plymouth, Massachusetts, learned to use cranberries from the Native Americans. By 1683, they were making cranberry juice. Cultivation of cranberries began around 1816, after Captain Henry Hall, of Dennis, Massachusetts, noticed that the wild cranberries in his bogs grew better when sand blew over them. Captain Hall began transplanting his cranberry vines, fencing them in, and spreading sand on them himself. By the 1820s, cranberries were being exported to Europe. By the 1850s, American sailors carried cranberries on their voyages to prevent scurvy.
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.
They grow on trees.
Pumpkins grow on vines.