They built mounds out of dirt from the grass lands and they put in valuable stuff to them and traded with other tribes.
They built mounds out of dirt from the grass lands and they put in valuable stuff to them and traded with other tribes.
the mound over there is covered in sea men
Potatoes need a mound of fertile soil around the plant not dirt.
The only part of the field that is "regulation" is the actual infield itself. The bases, home plate, batter's boxes, and pitcher's mound are always in the same location and the same dimensions depending on which league the field is made for. Some infields are designed with grass, some are all dirt, and some are all grass with dirt base paths, pitcher's mound (and sometimes pitching path). There is no regulation as to how far away the grass has to be from the foul line.
You can't. Softball doesn't have a raised mound.
"Ground mound" is the hink-pink for "dirt heap."
dirt. dirt. dirt......... and dirt
Simply because there is nothing in it. They have dirt, piles of dirt and maybe a dirt mound.
More than likely a pitcher's mound is removed by smoothing the dirt out with a bulldozer.
The dirt under grass can be called soil.
It's just made of dirt.