Plants

Thursday, 5 February 2026
21 facts about olives
21 facts about olives
"Where the olive refuses to grow, there the Mediterranean world ends"
It is not known exactly when and where the first olive tree, characteristic of the Mediterranean region, grew. Paleobotanists claim that wild olives g ...

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Sugar maple
Sugar maple trees thrive in cooler climates.
The perfect temperature is an average of -7 degrees Celsius (20 F).
Sweet potato
Sweet potatoes are eaten cooked or baked.
They are an increasingly popular menu item for many people.
Chestnuts
Chestnuts are one of the few "nuts" that contain vitamin C.
100 g of chestnuts contain 48% of the daily requirement for this vitamin. In addition to vitamin C, ...
Lemon
Sugar
Lemons are much sweeter than limes and contain 47% more sugar on average.
Kale
It is a resistant plant to diseases and pests that attack other plants in the cabbage family.
Birch
Plywood made of Baltic birch wood is an ideal product for the construction of speaker housings.
Birchwood resonates well, especially in the high and low tone peaks, which perfectly complements the gaps in frequencies that the speaker itself has problems with.
Chestnuts
Chestnut wood is also valuable.
Chestnut belongs to the same family as oak and, like its wood, it contains many tannins. This makes ...
Watercress
The medicinal properties of cress juice allow it to treat skin diseases, eczema, or eczema.
Corn
The cob usually contains 600 grains.
The grains are pea-sized and cling in regular rows around the white, fleshy substance that forms the cob.
Cornflower
Cornflowers bloom throughout the summer and at the end of summer, the plant disperses seeds.
Cornflowers often contaminate cereal and rapeseed crops, which is why they are considered a weed by farmers. A single plant can produce up to 800 seeds during its lifetime.