Wheat, grapevines, almonds, olives, and oranges were planted from the beginning. |
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Larvae of the grape root borer attack the larger roots and crown of grapevines. |
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At Osterley what are central fruiting grapevines in the carpet are foliate swags in the drawing. |
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Major agricultural uses of methiocarb include grapevines, citrus, berries, pastures, cereals, and ornamentals. |
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Copper sulfate is the oldest and most effective mean for protection of fruiters, bushes, grapevines and other plants from various diseases. |
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Also there were cornfields, grapevines, lemon trees, stands of bamboo, and forests of cactus. |
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The ocher yellow and cinnabar red walls suggest Morocco, while the citrus and grapevines in containers evoke Italy. |
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Such measurements of hours of bright sunshine have limitations when applied to the study of climatology of grapevines. |
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The deer continues moving past the cluster of grapevines I'm hiding in and now I can see her clearly. |
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Why not use a border of sawhorses for children to ride or a sturdy support for grapevines that children can also climb? |
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Though native, grapevines sometimes become too prolific and pull large trees over, causing a loss of shade, which many herbs need. |
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Dormant pruning of grapevines can be done at any time between leaf drop in the fall to budbreak in the spring. |
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There is a small enclosure concealed from the rest of the courtyard by two walls of grapevines and covered on top by more vines. |
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As you prune your grapevines, you also can propagate new plants to expand your orchard or share with friends. |
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I would urge every fruit lover to plant grapevines and to use every available bunch for this nourishing, refreshing, and healthful drink. |
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The ocher yellow and cinnabar red walls, on the other hand, suggest Morocco, while the citrus and grapevines in containers evoke Italy. |
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Sonoma County shimmers this month with fields full of red and gold grapevines and fat orange pumpkins. |
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At the rear, there's a raggedy patch of garden, partly covered in grapevines. |
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But sunshine and grapevines have done nothing to ease his disaffection. |
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Its pastel tinted hills offer us the whole gamut of colours, thanks to their centenary olive trees, their lavender, their grapevines. |
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The Mediterranean vegetable garden includes an old water tank as well as displays of rosemary, thyme, pumpkins, figs, globe artichokes, olives and grapevines. |
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It attacks only grapevines, and kills vines by attacking their roots. |
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Away from my own home landscape of sheep and wheat, there was a certain relief in the grapevines and fruit trees which lined the road. |
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That is because commercial grapevines are propagated from cuttings and are genetically identical clones. |
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These days pear orchards and wine grapevines dot some of the hillsides. |
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This person also cast doubt on whether the grapevines at oasis would have survived a long period of neglect. |
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No restrictions are in place on planting grapevines in Croatia and no distillation measures are applied. |
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One of the vineyards has annual vegetables intercropped with grapevines. |
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Other fields and cottage gardens grow grapevines on overhead trellises, the soil beneath the arches being densely planted with cabbages and other vegetables. |
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This Kosovo isolate was inoculated to young healthy grapevines and typical symptoms were obtained. |
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Cherry trees were in full bloom, grapevines grew everywhere, and giant patches of herbs surrounded a centre water feature complete with ducks and frogs. |
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Spiralling grapevines form a backdrop against which people are portrayed in action. |
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The large sugar beet and cornfields are interspersed with grapevines, winding around huge stakes, maple or elm trees. |
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The estate's charm resides in Ken Forrester's 'chenin blanc' vineyard, which consists of 40 year old chenin blanc grapevines. |
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Varieties commonly found in these forests include grapevines, trumpet vine, poison ivy, and Virginia creeper. |
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In spring, the sharpshooter, which spreads Pierce's disease to thousands of acres of California grapevines, lays neat rows of 12 to 20 eggs on the underside of leaves. |
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It is obtained with a selection of mixed marcs from Barbera, Nebbiolo and Erbaluce grapevines, distilled and extracted from the alembic at about 77° alcohol. |
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Outside, a playground for children, an area for donkeys, as well as a field of grain where they cultivate some birdseed, the corn and the buckwheat, the grapevines and the pinewood. |
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The resulting structure is totally respectful of the landscape, and the rows of grapevines that run up the hill seem to cross the ridge as if no interruption of any kind existed. |
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Dr McGovern notes that the hold of an Etruscan ship wrecked off the southern coast of France between 515-475BC was filled with grapevines, along with amphoras of the type found in Lattara. |
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Except, in this case, Mr. Carpinteri's plan was to use this land to plant 9,000 feet of hybrid grapevines in a region known for its harsh winters but that also enjoys a microclimate just right for the cultivation of grapes. |
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Most towns in North Bohemia had sloping land lots, which were, in combination with the local climatic conditions, suitable for growing grapevines. |
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In its entirety, the frieze consisted of marble panels, each about 98 cm long and 61 cm wide. The frieze included two decorative themes of tiny swirling palm trees and intertwining grapevines. |
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Fruits and roots, especially, constitute, according to the final report of the Working Group on Competition of 2009, one of the grapevines of the Haitian economy. |
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In 1887, a French delegation led by Pierre Viala, Professor at the Montpellier School of Agriculture, was sent to the United States in search of phylloxera-resistant grapevines. |
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Around 1875 phylloxera appears in the Cognac region. Phylloxera is an insect of the hemiptera family and one of its species, Phylloxera Vastatrix, attacks grapevines and sucks the sap from their roots. |
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This variety sometimes shows a certain inconsistency, with more or less fertile years, which is quite rare in general for grapevines as compared to other species such as fruit trees. |
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The vineyard has been recovered and replanted with 5,500 grapevines per hectare as is done in the most prestigious crus of the neighbouring Libourne wine region. |
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In the Czech Republic, grapevines grow best in South Moravia. |
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The pesticides and fungicides applied to grapevines are not water-soluble. |
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Native American grapevines include varieties such as Vitis labrusca, which is resistant to the bug. |
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The wild grapevines that twisted their coils from tree to tree. |
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These experiments have demonstrated that a gram-positive bacterium is the etiological agent of Pierce's disease in grapevines, and not a virus, as previously believed. |
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