procreation
Using the new particles produces bigger tomatoes than using the old pesticide.
Using the new pesticide produces bigger tomatoes than using the old pesticide. -Apex
Simon had gone to the market to buy some vegetables for dinner. He visited the local farmer's market to select fresh produce such as tomatoes, onions, and bell peppers.
The farmer can determine if his red tomatoes are pure or hybrid by examining the characteristics of the tomatoes. If all the tomatoes have uniform traits like size, shape, and color, they are likely purebred. If there is variability in the traits among the tomatoes, they are likely hybrids. Alternatively, the farmer can refer to the seed package or contact the supplier for information on whether the tomatoes are pure or hybrid.
Any crop which the farmer thinks he can produce for income. It could be corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, tomatoes, cucumbers, apples, peaches, avocado or anything else.
Yea because he can get lots of big tomatoes
08/22/08 Loveland, Ohio (30 miles east of Cincinnati) $25.00 a bushel from a local farmer who trucks her produce in from another 50 miles east 08/22/08 Loveland, Ohio (30 miles east of Cincinnati) $25.00 a bushel from a local farmer who trucks her produce in from another 50 miles east
When x = the acreage of tomatoes: x + x + 200 = 360 x + x = 160 2x = 160 x = 80 Therefore, 80 acres of tomatoes and 280 acres of rhubarb.
I think 12 lbs would be a good guess. 6 quarts of water is 12 pounds. Tomatoes are mostly water- there will be space between the tomatoes, but they can be heaped up over the brim of the basket. A produce manager or truck farmer may have actually weighed such baskets and would know for sure; if so, I hope they will supply the definitive answer.
Yes. BT is a biological control, and not a pesticide. I use it on cabbage and tomatoes.
Greetings Earthlings the poatoe Farmer's are having a huge sale on tomatoes eh?
Specifically, it depends on the farmer's location, what produce/crop is best grown/sold where that farmer lives, and what the farmer wishes to grow. This leaves anything from corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton and sorghum to tomatoes, potatoes, almonds, grapes (primarily for wine-making), oranges, apples, carrots, peas, beans, alfalfa, triticale, rye, lentils, canola, rapeseed, and many others.