That can vary considerably due to different seed sizes, but you should target a final population of about 10 to 14 plants per square foot.
Those sprouts you have in water are living on the tissue of the seed and will soon starve to death if you don't get them into some soil. Lentils are generally planted in the winter and harvested in late summer so you are okay in that respect. They will tolerate a little more cold than their cousins, peas and beans. I am not sure exactly how much one plant produces but commercially the harvest is a little over two thousand pounds of dried lentils per acre. I expect you may figure roughly a half pound yield per plant.
There are about 0.8036 bushels per cubic foot.
There are approximately 45,000 pecans in a bushel.
The number of bushels of wheat in a 60 cubic feet area would depend on the density of the wheat. Bushels measure volume, so you would need to know the weight of a bushel of wheat to accurately determine how many bushels would fit in a 60 cubic feet area.
There are 32 dry pints in 1 bushel, so in 2 bushels, there would be 64 dry pints.
The U.S. average yield for 2010 was 46.6 bushels/acre, 43.0 bu/a in 2011.
How many kilograms of what?
50 bushels per acre is not uncommon, depending on the variety and other conditions.
Medieval rice farmers in Japan produced about 88 bushels of rice per acre. With today's farming methods as much as 241 bushels per acre are being reported.
For the 2009 crop season, Texas' average corn yield was 108 bushels per acre.
The five-year average corn yield for North Carolina is 109 bushels per acre.
It depends on what kind of beans, how well the farmer grew the crop, whether his farm is good for growing beans, the weather, etc. It will typically range somewhere between 20 bushels per acre and 160 bushels per acre.
It depends on what kind of beans, how well the farmer grew the crop, whether his farm is good for growing beans, the weather, etc. It will typically range somewhere between 20 bushels per acre and 160 bushels per acre.
613. By the way, that's a really, really low yield for wheat. Less than 5 bushels per acre.
Approximately 60-75 bushels of wheat are typically planted per acre, depending on the specific variety, planting density, and growing conditions. Different factors like soil fertility, climate, and management practices can also influence the ideal seeding rate.
The average yield of corn per acre in Pennsylvania is approximately 150 bushels. The average soybean yield is 40 bushels per acre.
a butt load