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  2. Hickory Farms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hickory_Farms

    hickoryfarms.com. Hickory Farms, LLC is an American food gift retailer with headquarters in Chicago. [1] Richard Ransom established the company in 1951 when he began selling handcrafted cheese at local fairs. By 1959, the company added summer sausage and opened its first retail store in Maumee, Ohio. By 1981, it operated over 1,000 Hickory ...

  3. Carya ovata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_ovata

    Carya ovata. ( Mill.) K.Koch. Carya ovata, the shagbark hickory, is a common hickory in the Eastern United States and southeast Canada. It is a large, deciduous tree, growing well over 100 ft (30 m) tall, and can live more than 350 [3] years. The tallest measured shagbark, located in Savage Gulf, Tennessee, is over 150 ft (46 m) tall [citation ...

  4. Rural Free Delivery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rural_Free_Delivery

    Rural Free Delivery ( RFD ), since 1906 officially rural delivery, is a program of the United States Post Office Department to deliver mail directly to rural destinations. The program began in the late 19th century. Before that, people living in rural areas had to pick up mail themselves at sometimes distant post offices or pay private carriers ...

  5. Carya cordiformis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_cordiformis

    Carya cordiformis, the bitternut hickory, [2] also called bitternut, yellowbud hickory, or swamp hickory, is a large pecan hickory with commercial stands located mostly north of the other pecan hickories. Bitternut hickory is cut and sold in mixture with the true hickories. It is the shortest-lived of the hickories, living to about 200 years.

  6. Hickory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hickory

    Hickory flowers are small, yellow-green catkins produced in spring. They are wind-pollinated and self-incompatible. The fruit is a globose or oval nut, 2–5 cm (0.8–2.0 in) long and 1.5–3 cm (0.6–1.2 in) diameter, enclosed in a four- valved husk, which splits open at maturity.

  7. Carya glabra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_glabra

    Carya glabra, the pignut hickory, is a common, but not abundant species of hickory in the oak-hickory forest association in the Eastern United States and Canada. Other common names are pignut, sweet pignut, coast pignut hickory, smoothbark hickory, swamp hickory, and broom hickory. The pear-shaped nut ripens in September and October, has a ...

  8. Carya aquatica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_aquatica

    Carya aquatica, the bitter pecan or water hickory, is a large tree, that can grow over 30 metres (98 ft) tall of the Juglandaceae or walnut family. In the American South it is a dominant plant species found on clay flats and backwater areas near streams and rivers. The species reproduces aggressively both by seed and sprouts from roots and from ...

  9. Carya myristiciformis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_myristiciformis

    Carya myristiciformis, the nutmeg hickory, a tree of the Juglandaceae or walnut family, also called swamp hickory or bitter water hickory, is found as small, possibly relict populations across the Southern United States and in northern Mexico on rich moist soils of higher bottom lands and stream banks. Little is known of the growth rate of ...

  10. Agriculture in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Canada

    dairy: 12%. horticulture: 9%. poultry and eggs: 8%. In 2018, Canada was the world's largest producer of rapeseed (20.3 million tonnes), dry pea (3.5 million tonnes) and lentil (2 million tons), the 2nd largest producer of oats in the world (3.4 million tons), the 6th largest world producer of wheat (31.7 million tons) and barley (8.3 million ...

  11. Carya floridana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_floridana

    The Scrub Hickory was identified and named by Charles Sprague Sargent. The original Latin name was Hicorius floridana, but it has since been revised. Close relatives include the Pignut Hickory (Carya glabra), the Black Hickory (Carya texicana), and the Sand Hickory (Carya pallida). Genetics. Scrub hickory is a 64-chromosome species.