a healthy cornstalk usually has 2 cobs.
The cobs.
I didn't quite get your question, but I'll try my best to answer. Plants grow because of a little sprout inside of the seed that continues to grow by eating the food provided inside of the seed.
One
The chamber is called a vacuole, and many plant cells have only one, or have a large primary one.
TT or Tt
Each plant usually bears two or three cobs per plant. Some varieties bear more than others.
you just multiply them together
It took a while to let corn grow. they started off as a wild grass. The cob was about one inch long. After hundreds of years, the early Americans finally learned how to cross corn with other grasses to get bigger cobs and more cobs per plant.
3
The cobs.
Mostly One per plant- the plant is actually capable of multiple ( as is often seen in the case of baby corn varieties) cobs. The main contributing factors being soil quality+water availability and crowding of plants (spacing between them and spacing between rows.) The more space you give (with good soil+fertiliser+water) the better the chances of the plant being able to sustain >1 cob per plant.
yes cobs do jump, even though a lot of people say they dont many people around from where i am have cobs and all of them do it on there own accord such as when there in their field etc. depending on how your cob is you may need more patience to get the horse to tidily jump than when other horses can do it neatly (after a small amount of practice) where as cobs need more time!
You have that mixed up, and nor does the question make any sense. A cob is not a corn plant: it is a appendage that holds the corn kernels that is grown or comes from the corn plant. You can have many rows of corn with many cobs on them, and typically the number of cobs on a corn plant (especially GMO corn) is a 1:1 or 2:1 ratio.AnswerIt can vary widely depending on the type of corn, whether field, sweet, or another type, and depending on what the plant breeder bred it to do. Older varieties can have as few as 12 rows of kernels on a cob, while certain types of sweet corn can have as many as 24. The average across all types is 16 to 18 rows of kernels to the ear.
Ripening or rotting causes all plant matter to change color.
Cobs can get up to 14.2 hands high
Cobs and Robbers - 1953 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Approved (PCA #15000)
No.