He grows several dozen crops, including artichokes, shallots, watermelons, garlic, and many types of greens. |
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There are pyramids of sweet-smelling guavas, papayas, watermelons, pineapples, custard apples, lemons, limes and avocados. |
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The problem of having heavy melons hanging off the plants was solved by placing the watermelons in nylon slings with outside support. |
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Where available raccoons may also eat peaches, plums, figs, citrus fruits, watermelons, beech nuts, and walnuts. |
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The main exhibits are still life photos of fruits like oranges, grapes and watermelons. |
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As far as vegies go it's a great time to get in sweetcorn, tomatoes, butternut pumpkins, rockmelons and watermelons. |
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Although you can buy sectioned watermelons at the grocery store, somehow it's not quite the same as lugging home the whole enchilada. |
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Paddymelons, which look like small round watermelons, are often found beside outback roads. |
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The green piles of watermelons, which herald the scorching season ahead, are favoured thirst-quenchers. |
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There is a 7-foot wide row of cantaloupes, galia melons, and watermelons, about 40 feet long. |
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For instance, large number of watermelons, mangoes and other summer fruits began appearing on handcarts in residential colonies and markets. |
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Others planted truck gardens and sold corn, cotton, peanuts, sweet potatoes, tobacco, indigo, watermelons, and gourds at the market for profit. |
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These people had taken the land for contract farming of melons and watermelons, and as the water level in the river rose, they were stranded. |
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As for watermelons, pick the ones minus dents or scratches and a light thump should yield a dull hollow sound. |
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The impact blasted watermelons and oranges and tomatoes all over the sidewalk. |
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The ingredients are straight from the land: tomatoes, cucumbers, aubergines and watermelons. |
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Those in charge of the experiment are quick to point out that this means full-grown watermelons will fit on refrigerator shelves and occupy less space during exportation. |
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For starters, this plant geneticist is developing low-sugar watermelons. |
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At that time a crazy guy started to throw stones at the tank at the back, followed by watermelons. |
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Here they sell bananas, oranges, watermelons, freshly baked bread, sausages, hardboiled eggs, chocolate and energy drinks. |
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In 1997-1998, it was observed in commercial fields of watermelons and melons from east Texas and in all cucurbit-growing areas of Oklahoma. |
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The sight of mounds of watermelons and tender coconuts tempt you. |
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Tomatoes are the principal vegetable crop, but watermelons are important in the lower Wabash valley. |
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This is how Chinese farmers have described the dreadful sound of watermelons exploding in their fields. |
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They've assumed scientists were over-reacting, and that all environmentalists are watermelons. |
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Last summer, the overuse of growth chemicals led to acres of spoiled watermelons in Jiangsu province. |
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This class includes watermelons which do not qualify for inclusion in Class I, but satisfy the minimum requirements specified above. |
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It represented, in turn, one fifth of Community production of melons and watermelons. |
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The watermelons must be sufficiently developed and display satisfactory ripeness. |
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Very encouraging progress was made on certain segments, such as mini watermelons on the American market, or cherry tomatoes in Italy. |
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The watermelons featured here are one of the most plentiful fruits available in Kandahar province, used and traded by Kandaharis. |
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One village even offered six watermelons to thank the KPRT for their assistance. |
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The marketing standards applicable to watermelons falling within CN code 0807 11 shall be as set out in the Annex. |
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After people around the area heard that some journalists were hit they started to throw rocks and watermelons at the tanks. |
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The agricultural district, in which rice and watermelons and fruits and vegetables were grown in abundance, suddenly discovered a new, lucrative alternative crop. |
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Until the soil temperature is 65 degrees, you might as well not even bother planting watermelons, honeydew or muskmelons because the seeds just won't germinate. |
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Most of the larger fruits such as pumpkins and watermelons, and some of the bigger vegetables such as gourds and tubers, are easier to carve into novel shapes. |
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In each photograph she has included one or more smashed watermelons. |
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The fertile soil of the valleys produces a wide variety of fruits and vegetables, including citrus, sugarcane, watermelons, bananas, yams, and beans. |
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The anti-oxidant can also be found in other fruits and vegetables including watermelons, apricots and pink grapefruits. |
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We have horticultural science that can design seedless watermelons, fartless beans and square tomatoes. |
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Populations living on the outskirts of towns or farms can dig up potatoes and damage melons, watermelons and maize. |
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In his zany prop comedy Gallagher would sometimes smash watermelons and splatter the front rows of the audience. |
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During the last decades, a group of soilborne diseases of melons and watermelons has become prevalent and causes serious economic losses in various parts of the world. |
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As if attracted like a magnet, he picks up the split watermelon, which opens suddenly and pulls down a dozen or so watermelons that roll under the feet of the other customers. |
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At that moment, a man, also rather elderly, walks up to the watermelons and, as if irresistibly attracted, grabs hold of the only one that should not have been picked up. |
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Barley, rye, artichokes, chilli peppers and watermelons are also produced. |
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Local farmers presented total 15 tons of various goods, including varieties of honey, propolis, 20 varieties of melons, watermelons and pumpkins. |
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As we overtook rickety old cars on blind corners while Roland played a Kazantip hard house mix CD, we would pass people selling watermelons, red onions and car seats covered in plastic at the side of the road. |
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The couple had come to hawk a cartload of homegrown watermelons, and they set up their stall along a scenic stretch near a river, where visitors were plentiful and competition scarce. |
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Each piece features meticulously beaded watermelons, kiwis, dragon fruit or oranges, against a background of greenery. |
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The sticky juice immediately begins to run down the pile of watermelons. |
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The contents of each package, or lot for produce presented in bulk, must be uniform and contain only watermelons of the same origin, variety and quality. |
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She wheels an injured boy out in a shopping cart full of watermelons. |
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John McMillan, a congressman from South Carolina, sent a truckload of watermelons to the office of Walter Washington, the city's last presidentially-appointed mayor. |
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At first sight, it's just an ordinary working class district where fruit and vegetable stands overflow with tomatoes as big as watermelons and Lebanese bananas freshly picked up on the coast. |
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There was sheds made out of poles and roofed over with branches, where they had lemonade and gingerbread to sell, and piles of watermelons and green corn and such-like truck. |
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We planted some truck crops like watermelons and okra, which was risky. |
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If the tanginess of the meat is a bit too much to handle, you could balance it well with their briny grilled halloumi, served with sliced olives and watermelons. |
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Plants have also been modified for qualities attractive to consumers, such as seedless watermelons and grapes and the tangerine-grapefruit hybrid called a tangelo. |
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Seed catalogues and specialists offer giants like Old Colossus Heirloom Tomatoes, Oxheart carrots, Kelsae sweet giant onion and Carolina Cross watermelons. |
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