Avsnitt
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You and what you grow in your yard, patio, or balcony are Nature’s best hope.
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Preparing corn off the cob is a labor of love, but well worth the effort, according to host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow"
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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While in Los Angeles, host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" experiences a conversion regarding grilled corn on the cob
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From Silver Queen to even sweeter varieties, corn's optimal flavor is best when prepared this way...
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How do you like your corn on the cob? Host Amanda McNulty of "Making It Grow" shares her favorite way to prepare this tasty summertime treat
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Host Amanda McNulty visits Joshua Tree National Park, home of the Cottonwood Spring Oasis
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The eastern cottonwood is illegal to plant in some places.
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The leaves on eastern cottonwood are known for making "the lullaby of the prairies."
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Mountain Laurel has a fascinating pattern of twisting and turning branches, very decorative to look at but hard to maneuver through.
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Although the common name of Kalmia latifolia is mountain laurel, you can find this handsome evergreen native plant growing, often in thickets, from the mountains to the sea, including on South Carolina's Fort Jackson.
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Kalmia Gardens in Hartsville was the creation of Mrs. D. R. Coker, affectionately called "Miss May."
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Cicadas are native to our area and have been coexisting with their ecosystems for eons and eons.
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When Thomas Jefferson was president, there was an event that is finally repeating itself this year -- a concurrent emergence of two specific broods of periodic cicadas; and it won’t happen again until about another two hundred years.
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Unlike some people these days, cicadas don’t have dating apps; they use sound to find a mate.
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Naturalist Austin Jenkins talked to us recently about the periodic cicada emergence in South Carolina. Our state’s cicadas that will come out in huge numbers in the Piedmont are on a thirteen-year cycle.
- Visa fler