It sounds like you are describing a fruit called a pomegranate. Pomegranates have a hard, leathery outer skin that is green when unripe and red when ripe, containing many seeds inside.
The seeds are like little disks, round and thin and somewhat hard, roughly the diameter of a boysenberry "polyp." They don't bother a lot of people, but others find them to be annoying.
Water that has boiled and just slightly cooled is good for leguminous seeds which have a very hard coating. However, beans do not like being submerged in water and their seeds are not as hard as some others in their family.
Radish seeds can often survive hard freezing conditions due to their ability to enter a dormant state. However, if they are exposed to prolonged freezing temperatures or if the seeds were not properly matured and stored, their viability may be compromised. It's best to check the seed package for specific storage and germination information, but in general, many radish seeds can still germinate after hard freezing if they have been properly handled.
All plants grow from seeds, in the same way that all animal life comes from an egg cell. Coconut tree seeds are coconuts.
Yes, the stem of a guava plant is generally hard and woody in mature plants. The hardness of the stem provides support and structure for the plant as it grows.
yes a tomato is a fruit. A fruit is identified by they it grows if it grows on a tree or bush it is considered to be a fruit.
The seeds of the apples are in the center of the core, which is the very center. The apple grows from the core which is why the core is hard and you can't really eat it.
Eggplant grows on a bush - not dissimilar to a pepper plant. The plant has a hard stalk and the stems of the eggplant have very sharp thorns.
Actually it grows. In the wetter months of the desert it grows like a bush, but as it dries out it looses its leaves and finally dies. Then when a hard wind comes it blows it out of the ground away from its dead roots and you have the tumbleweed.
To save green bean seeds for future planting, allow the beans to fully mature on the plant until they are dry and hard. Remove the seeds from the pods and store them in a cool, dry place in a paper envelope or container. Label the seeds with the date and variety for future reference.
looking for name and picture of a tree in my area of s.i.,new york that grows in shady soil the tree sheads brown seedlings that look like the size of a bannana's seeds are inside this it is a hard brown leaf like that is not a leaf it has about 10 seeds per. please let me know?
The answer to the riddle is a strawberry plant. The fruit, the little red lady, is hard to find as it grows low to the ground and is often hidden by the green leaves of the plant.
George Bush, it was really hard to find out....
Pomegranate seeds can be hard due to the variety of the pomegranate, the ripeness of the fruit, or how it was stored.
This type of insect belongs to the family Tettigoniidae and is more commonly referred to as the katydid or the bush cricket.
In the book "Holes" by Louis Sachar, Magnet wants to become a baseball player when he grows up. He works hard and is determined to achieve this dream despite the challenges he faces at Camp Green Lake.
The seeds are like little disks, round and thin and somewhat hard, roughly the diameter of a boysenberry "polyp." They don't bother a lot of people, but others find them to be annoying.