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Bristol Farms stores have it! The one in Palm Desert, CA does by me, so check out Bristol Farms!
To irrigate there farms
No. The Bristol Farms in Palm Desert is NOT closing. They did close the Bristol Farms in Redondo Beach however.
It lowered the cost of shipping produce from farms to cities.
It lowered the cost of shipping produce from farms to cities
No, horses do not live in the desert. they live on farms, in fields etc
If there are mules in the Sonoran Desert they are on ranches or farms and not roaming wild.
Klompen, windmills, coffeeshops that's how foreigners see Holland. But actually it is Sinterklaas, and farms, the canals in Amsterdam.
it is used for peoples passion with there camels and trading.
The animals that live in the Andes include: the Alpacas, the Andean condors, the spectacled bear and the opossum. Other interesting animals found in the Andes are the cougar, the llama, the guanaco, the vicuna and the coatimundi. Most of these animals live in the altiplano but the cougar, the opossum and coatimundi live in low intermediate elevations. United Nations Farms
The Nile river, which was very useful for irrigation supported farming in ancient Egypt. Ancient Egyptians made canals that connected directly to the Nile. They then made sluices that gave water from the canals to farms. Farming was the key to the development of Egyptian civilization.
The problem with "trade" is that you buy things where they are plentiful and take them to someplace where they are scarce. The problem is MOVING your stuff from there to there. Wagons are slow, especially where there are few roads. Water transport is easy; a boat can carry a LOT of cargo, but only where the water goes. Hence, canals. This is a way to bring enormous loads of cargo, quickly and inexpensively, from far-away manufacturers and farms to cities that need stuff and food. Railroads are easier to build, but don't carry as much as a canal barge, but they served the same purpose; bring stuff from the maker to the user.