But just as the felling of a large tree
allows young plants to sprout in the newly sunny ground that it formerly shaded, the passing of a major scientist permits new ideas to spring up in the intellectual space she or he once dominated.
Not exact matches
I've been experimenting lately with growing microgreens, which are essentially very small edible
plants (like lettuce, radishes, beets, watercress, spinach, herbs and greens) that are harvested when they are very
young instead of being
allowed to grow to full size.
Endosperm: The germ's food supply, which, if the grain were
allowed to grow would provide essential energy to the
young plant.
Told from the viewpoint of a talking tree on the plantation where George Washington Carver spent his
young childhood, this handsome picture - book biography tells how the famous African American scientist always nurtured
plants and studied them, but the law did not
allow black children to go to school.
Once these seeds grow into
young seedlings, it's time to transplant them into a larger pot and
allow them to mature in our shadehouse until they get
planted out into the field this winter... and here's where transplantapalooza comes in!
It's the location of
Young Living's annual Winter Harvest and Spring
Planting projects, which
allow members to participate in the Seed to Seal process firsthand.