Yes, but not because they wanted to. They were to forced by Caucasian slave owners. The "picking of the lettuce" is a term to describe the manual labor they had to do a poorly treated immigrants.
they pick them off trees
it's sold by planting it and then freshley picking it and then it goes to the store and you8 can buy it oh and also when you pick it, it cleans the lettuce by a machine it's sold by planting it and then freshley picking it and then it goes to the store and you8 can buy it oh and also when you pick it, it cleans the lettuce by a machine
Yes, cut lettuce does grow back after you cut it. When I was young, we had a garden and used our lettuce all the time. Just don't pick the whole plant.
I pick lettuce as soon as it starts producing around a dozen palm sized leafs. It will continue to grow more leafs all spring and summer, though when the weather gets hot, the plant tends to bolt. When it bolts and goes to seed, I pull up the whole plant, and replant more. Planting lettuce again in August is good, since many lettuce varieties ( red, romaine, endive, grand rapids, etc. ) prefer cooler weather.
mexicans mexicans mexicans mexicans mexicans stupid
So they can pick the strawberry's!Cars are for driving on the street. Strawberries are not picked by car...dumb cracker
Mexican Mexicans Mexicans Mexicans Mexicans
The possessive form for the singular noun lettuce is lettuce's.
most plants are green ... lettuce, cabbage, conifer, bean etc etc etc ... take your pick
Romaine, or Cos lettuce,can be harvested when the head is neither too 'squishy' when pressed or really hard. Somewhere in-between is right. They would have over 30 leaves by that stage. If Romaine lettuce is left too long it will be bitter, so err on the side of under-readiness if in doubt.
romaine lettuce is different because it is much fresher than reg lettuce.
The noun lettuce has varied usage in the plural. Traditionally the usage is "three heads of lettuce", but the alternative "three lettuces" has become very common during the last century. The collective noun is always "I like lettuce" or "this farmer grows lettuce".