North Dakota grows more spring wheat and durum wheat than any other state in the US. North Dakota also leads the nation in produciton of lentils, dry peas, sunflowers, navy beans, pinto beans, flax, honey, canola, and barley.
Kansas ... it's the state flower. Sunflowers grow all over the U.S. and world, but Kansas is "the Sunflower state."
Special plants of North Dakota include red durum wheat and sugar beets, both major crops grown in North Dakota. North Dakota's state flower is the Wild Prairie Rose or Rosa Arkansana. North Dakota's state tree is the American Elm, the state fruit is the Chokecherry, and the state grass is the Western Wheatgrass.
North Dakota grows sugar beets
no
no
Yes, they grow honey in Fargo, North Dakota. More specifically, honey is grown in the Fargo, North Dakota area, especially in the Red River Valley. North Dakota is the nation's leader of honey production.
the flax plant can grow in North Dakota if that's any help :)
The number one crop grown in North Dakota is wheat, especially durum wheat which is used to make pasta. Other crops grown in North Dakota used for food are sunflowers, soy beans, sugar beets, beans (dry), potatoes, and oats.
wetland of the North Dakota portion of the praire pothole region
The answer depends on what you mean by "crops". If you mean the types of crops grown, there are at least 20 different types of crops grown in North Dakota each year. North Dakota is the largest producer in the US of durum wheat, hard red spring wheat, sunflowers, barley, navy beans, pinto beans, canola, flax seed, dry edible peas, lentils and honey. If you mean the amount in acres, more than 39 million acres of North Dakota are used to grow crops.
It is grown in a wide variety of locations but certainly in the area around Minot.
Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Washington, Colorado, Wyoming, Virginia, Minnesota, Maryland, South Dakota, Oregon and Utah all grow barley.