Assuming you are asking about colonial days, main cash crops in the Carolinas were pine forests, rice and indigo.
People came to South Carolina to get rich by growing tobacco.
Usually the land is good for farming and growing crops, which was a very important need for the settlers. That's partly why they settled in Colonial North Carolina.
you mama
harvesting and growing food
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Some of the divisions of horticulture include Pomology, which is the science and practice of growing, harvesting, handling, processing and marketing of fruit trees. Olericulture is the science and practice of growing, harvesting, storing and marketing vegetables. Floriculture is the science of growing, harvesting, designing and marketing flowering plants. The landscape and nursery industry involves the science and practice of propagating, growing, installing and maintaining the landscape using grasses, annual and perennial plants, shrubs and trees.
The colonial region described with rich soil, short winters, and long growing seasons is the Southern Colonies. This region, which included states like Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia, was known for its agricultural economy focused on crops like tobacco, rice, and indigo. These favorable conditions made the Southern Colonies a prime location for large plantations.
People moved to north Carolina in order to practice their religion freely. North Carolina was the first English settlement. People of these area was mostly foreigners.
There are three main meanings for harvesting and these are: 1. The gathering of crops. 2. The season when ripened crops are gathered. 3. A crop or yield of one growing season.
i did answer it.
single-tree cutting
April to October.