They do spawn like hostile mobs, so you can go back for more. If the Feeding Trough (from the Automation module) is enabled, the Toretoise will eat from it.The Toretoise will regenerate a random ore each time.Feeding the Toretoise Glow Berries will sometimes have it regenerate its ores.Something about your post gave me deja vu, I know that much.If you want to take these huge creatures home and use them to generate ores, there's some things you should know. Or maybe I padi better attention to a girl I knew, who did take "Horticulture". But your post, harkens back to when I had "Environmental Science", as it all seemed familiar. He was the one that merely said that there was one male tree and the others were all female, to which the male reporter compared the idea to bulls and cows, or harems. He was worried about either a draught or a freeze, killing his crop. As for the orchard data, the farmer on TV didn't give all of those details. However, I do remember tall rows of corn, that I know we planted. The Pecan Trees and Plumb Bushes were wild when we got here. Plow the fields, plant the seeds, make sure they get some water, and such. I'm reminded of, "Little House on the Prairie". I don't think they tried anything scientific in your terms. They just planted crops and hoped for the best, as far as I can recall. Too bad that you weren't able to share it back when Grandpa and Grandma were trying to be farm & ranch people. Hi, ZC! Well, thank you very much for that data. its not exactly modern, the ancient greeks and romans grafted their apple trees too. Grafting is slightly more complicated but the principles the same. Think of it this way, if you snap off a twig or small branch offf a tree, push it in the ground theres a good chance it will grow roots and sprout and grow into a new tree, all without any seed involved. In other words, all apple trees are clones of an original tree that people liked, thought "I want more of that", so they cloned them so they all produce identical fruit. If you want apple trees that are true to type you graft them, its also much quicker than growing from seed. Which is a fancy way of saying they aren't grown from seed. Because I wasn't even considering man-made affects, or whatever I mean.Īpple trees and almost all fruit grown commecially are propageted by grafting or budding and is known as "vegetative propagation". Leo Star Dragon 1 a écrit :Ah, "grafting".
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