Mint is a fast growing spreading plant, they like full sun or part shade, they will die back at the first frost but roots will live on to provide new growth in zones 5 thru 11, in zones 8 and southern from there it will be a perennial.
Keep plant moist, but do not allow water to sit, they like to be damp not wet.
An annual plant typically completes its life cycle in one year, so it will produce flowers and fruit in that same year before dying off. Once an annual plant has produced fruit and seeds, it completes its life cycle and a new generation will need to germinate from those seeds in the following year.
Probably because of the severe weather this winter.
Only from seeds. No if it is dead, but it doesn't die in winter
High, low or normal, depends on what you are dying from.
There is a record 270 endangered whooping cranes, But annual whooping crane mortality is high, with as many as half of the babies dying in their first year of life, and as many as 20 adults dying each year.
Starvation, sickness, no proper shelter in winter, Indian attacks, that kind of stuff.
Deserts are generally hot. If you go in the winter they won't be as hot. Being less hot is good for things such as: Not dying.
Edgar Winter - Dying To Live, its a chop and sampled beat
Yes, you should.
A dying person is looking back on their life regretting how they acted and regretting what became of them.
Yes, peas are annual plants. They complete their life cycle within one year, growing from seed to maturity, producing flowers and pods, and then dying off within a single growing season.
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