nope
Not sure what you are asking. Cotton is itself a plant, so it seems you are asking how to use a plant to grow a plant.
yes. beans.
I belive cotton Wil grow out then it will be made into a Cotton Fabric then sent to the Factory
If you live in a sub-tropical geography, you may be able to grow a cotton plant.
No. Cotton plants are reproduced through their seeds. Commercial cotton -- the fibre -- is harvested from the cotton bolls what grow on the shrub.
cotton plant grows best in black soil, so it grows mainly in maharashtra, uttar pradesh and parts of the deccan plateau.
A cotton plant has a herbaceous stem, which is non-woody and has a soft texture. It is flexible and allows the plant to grow quickly during its growing season.
Cotton helps beans grow when you get the cotton let it sit for a couple of days. Then over some time the beans will start to grow little roots, and then you can plant them, but don't let them sit in the cotton for too long otherwise the beans will grow black and smell weird .
Cotton is a warm weather plant. It grows in southern states and in central California. I live in central California and today I think we grow more cotton than is grown in the south. We have fields and fields of cotton.
Sure, but it won't grow.
Cotton and enriched soil will help them grow at the same rate, however the ones planted in cotton aren't likely to have a very long livespan due to the fact that the roots of the plant are not growing.
No, cotton is made from the fibers of the cotton plant, while sheep produce wool which is used for yarn and fabric. Cotton fibers are harvested from the cotton plant's bolls and spun into yarn for textiles, while sheep are shorn to obtain wool for making fabric.