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i dont know and dont really care but right now i need the answer
ripe
The prevalence of trade-offs is a result of the complexity of the world in which we live. Simple situations do not involve trade-offs. You are wandering through the savanna, you are hungry, you come upon a fruit tree bearing delicious, ripe fruit; you eat one. No trade off is involved. But if you are a busy city dweller, trying to decide whether you should buy a new television set, that is more complicated. There are thousands of other things you could do with the money.
In many ways, yes. When you trade, you take something that has actual value to you, and you directly exchange it for something else that has value to you, usually to the mutual benefit of both parties. What you each have is needed or strongly desired by the other. Money is too far removed from the actual object that has value. "Dollars" float through thin air at light-speed, and their meaning is getting lost. The problem with trade is mostly a matter of convenience. I just ate a perfectly ripe pear. If I wanted to get another one by direct trade, how would I do that? There are too many people, and too many things from too far away, to make trade an everyday experience.
A subsistence economy has benefits that are few and far between, however they do exist. Thus i will proceed to list them. 1) A subsistence economy only creates enough food for its people so no surplus is created and no food will be wasted through any form of disposal. 2) Many subsistence economy's have many resources but not the technology or wealth to exploit aforementioned resources, thus making them ripe for exploitation by rich capitalists, thus driving up the countries GDP. 3) Workers in a subsistence economy are motivated as they must work hard to feed their potentially starving family's, and if they do happen to get fired they will (with almost no doubt) be led to an early grave. 4) There is no shortage of easily exploitable workers in a subsistence economy as everyone wants work and everyone is willing to receive a pittance for the work, and child labor is not outlawed in many subsistence economies. 5) Governments in subsistence economy's are easily corrupt by rich capitalists (and the government can't be unseated by the citizens in any form of rebellion as they are all to weak) which can potentially drive up standards of living in the country if the government uses any of its money to help citizens. 6) In a capitalist economy wants are said to be 'unlimited'. This is the economic problem. But in a subsistence economy all the citizens want is food, water and shelter. There is no time for luxuriating or dreaming. Hopefully i have satisfied your question, and if not this was difficult so stop whining. But advantages of a subsistence economy? What an odd question. On the contrary the only reason I found this was because i am researching the same topic. Have fun out there ~Dylan F~
Farmers harvest their crops quickly to avoid having it been eaten by pest their need the crops to have full nutrition's :~)
i dont know and dont really care but right now i need the answer
they flood the land and the ripe ones float up
Basically the tool would be used for someone to cut and harvest the crops when they are ripe.
The full moon nearest the autumnal equinox is known as the Harvest Moon. Traditionally, Algonquin children would perform the task of picking the ripe crops during the Harvest Moon.
Harvesting
Farmers put fences around their land to keep thieves and animals out. They put nets over blueberry bushes to keep birds from eating them. They shoot squirrels to protect pecan trees so they can harvest a crop and not have their pecans eaten by animals. They try to harvest wheat as soon as it is ripe so a lightning strike does not set it afire and burn up the crop or a hail storm does not beat it into the ground.
Pick them off the tree when they are ripe.
to make it ripe faster because there is something in the rice/rice container that helps mangoes(or fruits) become ripe faster 'this is our investigatory project^__^' Rosalie
whenever they turn red they are ripe and ready to eat
You wait until they're ripe and press the A button when you're in front of them. If you can't tell when it's ripe, then press A anyway and on a day it is ripe you'll pick it. It's not that hard, really.
An arborist will harvest all of your ripe trees with one action. Available for a single use only.