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Where do nuts grow?


Alpo

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In an online story someone refers to an "orange orchard". The girl corrects him. "Oranges don't grow in orchards, they grow in groves."

 

And that just got me thinking about it. Citrus fruit grows in groves. Apples and pears grow in orchards. Pineapples grow on plantations.

 

But where do nuts grow? If you've got 500 walnut trees, is that a walnut orchard or a walnut grove or a walnut -- what?

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Orchard  .. in the central valley there in a huge walnut orchard .

we can buy then raw with hull to remove it you want black hands

they have quad with nut roller to harvest them pretty  fast , I was think man that thing could pick up brass fast

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What Is the Difference Between a Grove and an Orchard?

 

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An orchard is a grove, but a grove is not necessarily an orchard. Grove is more inclusive than orchard, referring not only to the fruit and nut trees of an orchard, but also to any type of trees growing in groups without underbrush, according to the Georgia Department of Agriculture. Although "grove" and "orchard" are almost interchangeable, custom, more than strict meaning, determines which word to use in a particular context.

 

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Orchard

An orchard is a planting of fruit, nut or maple trees, according to the Merriam-Webster online dictionary. The word "orchard" has Old English and Latin roots, meaning "yard garden." Considering the literal meaning of these words, it follows that a yard garden is a place to grow food. In common usage, an orchard can consist of one type of tree, such as an apple orchard, or various fruit trees, in which case it is generally referred to simply as "orchard."

 

 

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Grove

A grove is a small group of trees without underbrush, especially trees that bear fruit, says the Merriam-Webster online dictionary. "Grove" has its origins in Old English from a word meaning "grove" or "copse," with a meaning similar to "thicket." Therefore, grove can refer to any small stand of trees -- deciduous or evergreen -- or a small wooded area kept free of brushy undergrowth.

 

 

 

To sum it up; Orchards will have grass or some other type of ground covering while the ground under the trees is bare or nearly so in an Grove

 

Fixed it

 

..

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Growing up in S. California 50/60's it used to be the citrus capital of world and one of the biggest vegetable producers, and dairies.

We called them Orange Groves and Walnut groves.

Now S. Calif. is a sea of asphalt and Liberals which off gas more than we need!

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3 hours ago, Sedalia Dave said:

Next question what do you call the place where peanuts grow?

A field. Just like corn grows in a corn field, peanuts grow in a peanut field.

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10 hours ago, Sedalia Dave said:

What Is the Difference Between a Grove and an Orchard?

 

 

 

 

 

To sum it up; Orchards will have grass or some other type of ground covering while the ground under the trees is bare or nearly so in an orchard..


??????

 

Seamus

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We have lots of pecans around here.

We send them to the Pecannery for processing.

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12 hours ago, Sedalia Dave said:

To sum it up; Orchards will have grass or some other type of ground covering while the ground under the trees is bare or nearly so in an Orchard Grove

 

1 hour ago, Seamus McGillicuddy said:


??????

 

Seamus

 

 

Fixed it

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If you're lucky, in your mama's back yard.  They planted the pecan tree when I was six months old.  It bore only every other year, but had enough nuts for both families for the two-year period.  We lost it in 1989 to hurricane Hugo.

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14 hours ago, J.D. Daily said:

"California The Land of Fruits & Nuts"


I've been here since 1967... totally agree with the above.
Anything that is not a nut or a fruit, is a flake.

I've watched CA go from the 5th largest (formerly conservative) industrial power in the world... to a 3rd world socialist banana republic today.

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