TRUE
True
A growing season is when the most crops are grown it is determined by the climate.
The growing season depends on where you are at in Central America papayas produce year round with most production from March-May.
because its cold
No. Utah is too far north and does not have a long enough growing season. Most places do not have enough water, either.
duhhhhhhhhhhhh winter!! >.<
Cotton requires a longer growing season and hotter weather than is present in the North - it doesn't do well if the temperature drops below 60 °F (~15 °C) and thrives in temperatures around 90 °F (~32 °C). Cotton simply will not thrive in the the colder temperatures present most of the year in the North. It also requires a fairly long growing season - again, a problem in the North. Most cotton growing regions fit the description of hot and fairly long growing season - Southeastern US, Egypt, India, etc.
The growing season in Kansas depends on which part of the state you are in. The averages range from about 165 days in the NW part of the state to about 205 in the South-Central and SE parts of the state, with most places being between 180 and 190 days. Kansas City for instance has an average growing season of about 190 days, while Wichita has an average growing season of about 200 days and Goodland has an average growing season of about 165 days and Topeka has an average growing season of around 185 days. Growing season lengths can be drastically different from year to year with some places in Kansas experiencing seasons as short as 145 days in some years, while some places in Kansas have had growing seasons last as long as 250 days in some years.
Most of Japan is mountain. Rock isn't nessecarily good for growing crops.
It tells us how long the tree has lived. Each ring represents one growing season, which in most cases is a year.
I think they grow something all year over there....