Try tobacco tea.
Simple recipe:
One to two pouches of the cheapest loose tobacco you can find.
One gallon of boiling water.
Steep the tobacco in the boiling water and allow it to cool. When cool, strain into a secure container (this is essentially nicotine water and a potent neurotoxin). Spray the tea on infested areas with a garden sprayer. Be certain to wash your hands well after using this pesticide.
Nicotine is one of the oldest know pesticides and is relatively safe, with precautions, to use on most plants.
no thats just stupid lol Carya illinoinensis the pecan is naturally propagated by seed. As the pecan nut is the seed you can therefore produce a pecan tree from a pecan nut.
Yes, a pecan tree has many cells.
Most likely you only have one pecan tree. Plus there a probably no other pecan trees nearby. Your pecan tree has to have another pecan tree close enough so that they can pollinate. If no pollination occurs, no pecans.
Yes, a pecan tree has many cells.
No, the compound noun pecan tree is a word for any pecan tree anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Pecan Tree Drive, Baton Rouge, LA or Pecan Tree Terrace, Colonial Heights, VAPecan Tree Inn, Queen Street, Beaufort, NCGreen Tree Pecan Company, Powell, TX"Lessons From a Pecan Tree" by Enid Sanford
Pecan tree is an angiosperm of family Juglandaceae
One state only has the pecan tree as a state tree. That state is Texas.
A pecan tree is in the Plantae kingdom.
me
draw a regular tree!!!
That would be Pecan Pie, using the nuts of the Pecan tree, not the whole tree.
does a pecan tree have to tassel to bare nuts