False
He can be found on Full House, and on America's Funniest Videos. They both air on ABC Family.
The Wild Flower Preservation Society Of America
no, it is just a legend but there is a lizard found in tropical America that is called Basiliscus lizard. Basiliscus is the genus in which the basilisk lizard (all subspecies) are found.
The Mata mata turtle is NOT an endangered species. It is found in plenty in South America.
ORIGINAL ANSWER:not a mowtown songit was a number 8 song by America in 1982===========================================================ADDITION:Since I was looking for a song of the same name - And the above answer wasn't the solution - I kept on looking and eventually found it!I think you're looking for a song called "You can do magic" by 'Limmie & The Family Cookin'.That is, if we both had the same song in mind! :P
True - apex
False (APEX)
The songs that Cecil Sharp found when he came to America were more than 200 years.
True
The state of Kentucky is known as the Bluegrass State. It is so named because there is an abundance of bluegrass that is found all over the state.
Yes it is. The Native Americans would walk great distances to collect it.
More then 200 years
Because there is a type of grass seed that is tinted blue when the sun hits it just right. This grass is called of course, Bluegrass. Since this grass was found only in Kentucky, the stated received its nick name of the bluegrass state. However bluegrass can be bought and found in other states as well now.
More then 200 years
Cool Season Type Grasses: Bentgrass, Kentucky Bluegrass, Rough Bluegrass, Red Fescue, Annual Ryegrass, Perennial Ryegrass. Typical Transition Zone Grasses: Kentucky Bluegrass; Tall Fescue; Perennial Ryegrass; Thermal Blue; Zoysiagrass. Warm Season Type Grasses: Bahia, Bermuda Grass; Buffalo Grass; Carpet Grass; Centipede; St. Augustine Grass; Zoysiagrass
They were from England, more than 200 years earlier. (APEX)
Kentucky's official state nick name is "The Bluegrass State." Other nicknames are Dark and Bloody Ground, Hemp State, the Rock-Ribbed State and the Tobacco State. Bluegrass is not really blue--it's green--but in the spring, bluegrass produces bluish-purple buds that when seen in large fields give a rich blue cast to the grass. Early pioneers found bluegrass growing on Kentucky's rich limestone soil, and traders began asking for the seed of the "blue grass from Kentucky." The name stuck and today Kentucky is known as the Bluegrass State.