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The fruit bearing clusters of palm trees are called drupes. This is a close-up of one cluster of drupes from a Pygmy Date Palm from my yard. (I also have another variety of palm that produces huge drupes of orange, fiberous fruit, each drupe cluster weighing about 20 pounds or 9 kilos.)
The drupes emerge from a protective pod (also pictured) that hardens into wood after opening. The little balls on the stalks are flower buds which will turn into tiny yellow flower clusters before going to seed.
Shot for Looking Close… on Friday!, Flora on Black Background
Au 14 °S , le café est surtout une plante cultivée en Ethiopie , puis au Yemen .
Des Hollandais importeront des graines , en Inde , à Ceylan et dans l'ile de Java.
Ce sont des plants d' Arabica...... qui vont se développer, également dans les iles avoisinantes.
Au 19° s , une épidémie de rouille dévaste la majeure partie des plantations.
L'indonésie introduit alors le café Robusta ,plus résistant à cette maladie.
Depuis l'indépendance, les plantations de café sont gérées comme des plantions publiques d'Etat , et on introduit de nouvelles variétés d'Arabica....
Désormais, 90% des plantations fournissent du Robusta et les autres plantations de l'Arabica .
L’arabica est cultivé dans les fincas (fermes) entre 750 et 1400 m d'altitude sur les flancs du volcans de Bandung et dans l'Est de java sur le Plateau d' Ijen.
I had to look up online to see what this fruit is called. From Wikipedia: "The fruits of all dogwood species are drupes with one or two seeds, often brightly colorful."
From my set entitled ‘Sumac”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/sets/72157607186471302/
In my collection entitled “The Garden”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/collections/7215760718...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sumac (also spelled sumach) is any one of approximately 250 species of flowering plants in the genus Rhus and related genera, in the family Anacardiaceae. The dried berries of some species are ground to produce a tangy purple spice often used in juice.
Sumacs grow in subtropical and warm temperate regions throughout the world, especially in North America.
Sumacs are shrubs and small trees that can reach a height of 1-10 meters. The leaves are spirally arranged; they are usually pinnately compound, though some species have trifoliate or simple leaves. The flowers are in dense panicles or spikes 5-30 cm long, each flower very small, greenish, creamy white or red, with five petals. The fruits form dense clusters of reddish drupes called sumac bobs.
Sumacs propagate both by seed (spread by birds and other animals through their droppings), and by new sprouts from rhizomes, forming large clonal colonies.
The drupes of the genus Rhus are ground into a deep-red or purple powder used as a spice in Middle Eastern cuisine to add a lemony taste to salads or meat; in the Turkish cuisine e.g. added to salad-servings of kebabs and lahmacun. In North America, the smooth sumac (Rhus glabra), and the staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina), are sometimes used to make a beverage, termed "sumac-ade" or "Indian lemonade" or "rhus juice". This drink is made by soaking the drupes in cool water, rubbing them to extract the essence, straining the liquid through a cotton cloth and sweetening it. Native Americans also used the leaves and berries of the smooth and staghorn sumacs combined with tobacco in traditional smoking mixtures.
Species including the fragrant sumac (Rhus aromatica), the littleleaf sumac (R. microphylla), the skunkbush sumac (R. trilobata), the smooth sumac and the staghorn sumac are grown for ornament, either as the wild types or as cultivars.
The leaves of certain sumacs yield tannin (mostly pyrogallol), a substance used in vegetable tanning. Leather tanned with sumac is flexible, light in weight, and light in color, even bordering on being white.
Dried sumac wood is fluorescent under long-wave UV light. Mowing of sumac is not a good control measure as the wood is springy resulting in jagged, sharp pointed stumps when mowed. The plant will quickly recover with new growth after mowing. See Nebraska Extension Service publication G97-1319 for suggestions as to control.
At times Rhus has held over 250 species. Recent molecular phylogeny research suggests breaking Rhus sensu lata into Actinocheita, Baronia, Cotinus, Malosma, Searsia, Toxicodendron, and Rhus sensu stricta. If this is done, about 35 species would remain in Rhus. However, the data is not yet clear enough to settle the proper placement of all species into these genera.
This is our ad for DrupalCon SF, where we have a spot in the program booklet as sponsors.
So what's Kit? Check it out: drupal.org/project/kit.
Poison Ivy is well-known for causing Urushiol-induced contact dermatitis, an itchy, irritating, and sometimes painful rash in most people who touch it. It is caused by urushiol, a clear liquid compound in the plant's sap.
The berry-like fruit, a drupe, mature by August to November with a grayish-white colour. Fruits are a favorite winter food of some birds and other animals. Seeds are spread mainly by animals and remain viable after passing through the digestive tract.
This week @spoonflower the challenge is to utilise the colours Coral, Grass and Peony to coordinate with their Petal Solids fabrics. The challenge is called In Bloom and my entry is called Plum Harvest.
These are available for purchase now. There is a 25% discount on wallpaper at the moment.
I hope you like them :) Thank you if you vote over the weekend and hope you are having a Happy Easter. xo
Gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa) leaves turn shades of maroon and purple. White berries or “drupes” grow on stalks that turn bright red in autumn.
Drupal modules as of 11/9/07
Full-sized, legible photo can be seen here: http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2007464793&size=o
Linkable version here: www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_all.html
This photo set contains the 5 smaller printable sections.
These linkable Cheat Sheets are here:
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html
I created this graphic because I felt overwhelmed with how many Drupal modules were out there, and I wanted to have a single cheat sheet that I could print out and reference. But this proved to be impossible, and it took me splitting up this massive photo into 5 subsections listed above in order to legibly print out all of the modules -- all of the modules as of November 9th, 2007 that is. (There's been another 20+ new projects created since then according to http://drupal.org/taxonomy/term/14/0).
A couple of technical points: The modules are color coded according to the 30 categories listed here: http://drupal.org/project/Modules
Also this massive graphic actually has repeating modules in the sense that if a module is in three different categories, then it'll be listed 3 different times.
There were also 36 projects that weren't categorized and inadvertently left out of this big graphic, but were included in part 5 of the cheat sheet -- along with the project pages that have been created without a release, projects w/ deprecated HEAD or pre-4.7.x releases & CVS namespaces that don't have a current project page.
Finally, this listing doesn't take into consideration the fact that many Drupal project releases actually contain multiple modules within them. For example, the Drupal for Facebook module is actually composed of 9 modules.
UPDATE: The 30 MB excel file that contains the raw data used to generate these visualizations has been uploaded to scribd.com
Here is a similar ZIA with Drupe, colored with Prismacolor pencils. I should have known that with the attention span of a two year old I couldn't do two exactly alike, so I added Ixorus and Buttercup to Drupe and Nzeppel.
FULL SIZE: http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2395/2053916246_f1e007e75c_o.png
More details here: Panels: What is Context? & here.
The export code to recreate this panels scenario of overriding taxonomy/term/tid with contextual panels be found here: drupal.pastebin.com/f1bc881a3
Just copy & paste it from the box, add a new panels page, and then click import and paste it in. It helps to have some stock data with taxonomy terms created by the devel generate module.
As the owner of an ecommerce store, you have many major decisions to make that directly impact your company. What products will you carry? How will you determine your pricing? What shipping services will you use? All these and more are questions you need to answer before launching your site.
But...
voxilltec.com/2017/02/20/drupal-vs-magento-right-ecommerc...
Jen Lampton, lead of the Twig initiative for Drupal, watches as Twig is committed to Drupal core live during the BADCamp 2012 keynote by Dries Buytaert, Drupal's project lead. The commit was the culmination of months of hard work by Jen and other contributors.
This one made it onto drupal.com! Here's a screenshot: www.flickr.com/photos/runforcover/3821462202/
Other mentions:
twitter.com/bertboerland/status/3152770147
twitter.com/kristofvanroy/status/3163294319
Love that Budzic by Sue Clark. You can find the step-out at Tangled Ink Art. I put it inside of Drupe for the Square One Focus tangle this week.
The Drupal community is one of the largest open source communities in the world. They're developers, designers, strategists, coordinators, editors, translators, and more. Each year, they meet at DrupalCamps, meetups, and other events in more than 200 countries. But once a year, the community comes together at the biggest Drupal event in the world: DrupalCon North America.
I guess this is why they call it fall.
I'm guessing under a walnut tree.
Near the Fountain Garden
Cantigny Park, Wheaton, Illinois 41.854053, -88.154825
September 29, 2020
COPYRIGHT 2020 by JimFrazier All Rights Reserved. This may NOT be used for ANY reason without written consent from Jim Frazier.
200929cz7-90531600
SEE FULL SIZE: www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2009094288&size=o
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html
Drupal Modules as of 11/09/07.
SEE FULL SIZE: www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2026324860&size=o
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html
Drupal Modules as of 11/09/07.
BlueMasters for Drupal is based on the BlueMasters PSD template, which was designed by Wendell Fernandes and released for Smashing Magazine and its readers.
BlueMasters has been ported to Drupal and is supported by More than Themes, as part of our ongoing effort to bring quality themes to Drupal.
Which other theme would you like to see ported to Drupal?
Let us know at www.drupalizing.com.
Features
- Custom front page with 4 block regions
- Footer with 4 block regions
- A total of 12 block regions
- implementation of a JS Slideshow
- CSS rules for
- Read More and Comment buttons
- Images into content or blocks
- Contact form
- 2-column layout for inner pages
- 3-column layout with a JS Slideshow for the front page
///////////////////////////////////////////////
Tangle in a tangle challenge #44
Tangle string is Drupe
Done on watercolor paper layered on scrapbook paper and cardstock.
I've started making cards from my challenge pieces.
Apropos www.disambiguity.com/drupalorg-come-wireframe-with-me/.
This is the homepage, in case you couldn't guess. I forgot to include the site search, though. :(
SEE FULL SIZE: www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2009065024&size=o
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html
Drupal Modules as of 11/09/07.
SEE FULL SIZE: www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2009084128&size=o
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html
Drupal Modules as of 11/09/07.
This is a closeup of a calendar. Notice today's date is highlighted. For more information, see openconcept.ca
For more recent screenshots of Drupal Calendars.
Okay, Drupal. Since *you're* so fucking smart with uppercase, lowercase and punctuation, why don't *you* just provide me with a password, huh?
Maybe you can make me one a really cool one, like "Xco_s4Wwl3". I love those. Because I got nothing better to do with my time than frequently requesting new passwords from you, because you think the ones I provide are rubbish, even though yours are impossible to remember.
Yes, Drupal, you got it all figured out, don't you? Well, newsflash: you're a system, runnning on hardware capable of calculating a request every 0.0001 second. I'm happy for you. That must be an awesome feeling being smart like that. And I really like you in general. So take it from a friend: STOP ACTING SO GODDAM SMUG ABOUT IT, YOU ASSHOLE!