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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
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."
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.
Gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa) leaves turn shades of maroon and purple. White berries or “drupes” grow on stalks that turn bright red in autumn.
Wizzlern.nl is a group of skilled Dutch Drupal experts who can train developers and themers in Drupal.
See also: www.flickr.com/photos/x-foto/4923221504/
I used a single camera-mounted 580EX flash bounced off the ceiling.
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Portuguese
Pupunha (Bactris gasipaes, Kunth) é o fruto da pupunheira, uma planta de porte magnífico da família Arecaceae (antiga Palmae), a qual pode crescer até 20 m e também é originária das florestas tropicais do continente americano. É muito conhecida e consumida pelas populações nativas da América Central até a Floresta Amazônica, sendo há séculos utilizada na sua alimentação.
Os frutos são freqüentemente consumidos depois de cozidos em água e sal ou na forma de farinha ou óleo comestíveis. Contudo eles também podem ser matéria prima para a fabricação de compotas e geléias.
Existe uma grande variedade de aves, que se alimentam da pupunheira silvestre, principalmente as araras, os papagaios e os periquitos (Psittacidae), os quais ocasionalmente podem ser espécies endêmicas com risco de extinção.
No Brasil, essa planta é uma solução viável para a industria palmiteira porque apresenta características agronômicas adequadas para a substituição com vantagens de outras palmeiras nativas como o açaí (Euterpe oleraceae) e a juçara (Euterpe edulis), que são exploradas de forma extrativista e predatória e por isso apresentam restrições legais e risco de extinção. O mercado interno brasileiro de palmito é cerca de cinco vezes maior do que o externo, que apresenta uma demanda crescente desse produto cada vez mais utilizado na culinária internacional. O cultivo da pupunha é economicamente importante também para a Costa Rica.
English
It is a palm which can typically grow to 20 m or taller, with pinnate leaves 3 m long on a 1 m long petiole. The fruit is a drupe with an edible pulp surrounding the single seed, 4–6 cm long and 3–5 cm broad. The rind (epicarp) of the wild palm's fruit can be red, yellow, or orange when the fruit is ripe depending on the variety of the palm.
B. gasipaes is well known by the native population where it grows, and it has been used for centuries as food. The fruit is frequently stewed in salted water. However, it may be eaten raw, peeled and dressed with salt and honey, used to make compotes and jellies, or also used to make flour and edible oil.
Many species of birds feed on this wild palm, notably macaws, parrots and parakeets, all members of the family Psittacidae. Some of these are endemic species, which are in danger of extinction.
Because the huge importance of B. gasipaes for the native populations, there are numerous common names for this plant in several languages and many countries. For example, in English: peach-palm or pewa (Trinidad and Tobago), peyibay(e), and pejivalle; in Spanish: pejibaye (Costa Rica, Nicaragua), chontaduro or chantaduro, (Colombia, Ecuador), pijuayo (Peru), pijiguao (Venezuela), tembé (Bolivia), pixbae (pronounced pibá) (Panama), and in Portuguese: pupunheira, and pupunha (Brazil). In addition, there are several botanical synonyms, including Bactris ciliata (Ruiz & Pav.) Mart., B. insignis (Mart.) Baill., B. speciosa (Mart.) H. Karst., B. utilis (Oerst.) Benth. & Hook.f. ex Hemsl., Guilelma chontaduro Triana, G. ciliata (Ruiz & Pav.) H. Wendl., G. gasipaes (Kunth) L. H. Bailey, G. insignis Mart., G. speciosa Mart., G. utilis Oerst., and Martinezia ciliata Ruiz & Pav.
This plant may also be harvested for heart of palm, and has commercial advantages in being fast growing; the first harvest can be from 18 to 24 months after planting. In Brazil, it is a viable solution for the heart of palm cultivation industry because its agricultural characteristics are adequate for it to be beneficial to substitute it for other native palms such as species of Euterpe including Euterpe oleracea (known as açaí) and Euterpe edulis (known as juçara), that have been extensively exploited and are protected as endangered species. The Brazilian domestic market for heart of palm is about five times bigger than the external one; however, there is an increasing demand for this product internationally as it is increasingly used in international cookery. In addition, the cultivation of Bactris gasipaes is also economically important for Costa Rica.
Composition of 100 g of pulp
164 calories, 2.5 g of protein, 28 mg of calcium, 31 mg of phosphorus, 3.3 mg of iron, 1,500 mmg of vitamin A, 0.06 mg of vitamin B1 and 34 mg of vitamin C.
Wikipedia
Here lies the Frank Grimes of the Drupal world. Hard working, persistent, ever -present - but largely ignored.
Now it's gone forever. Well, unless it gets reopened. Easily done.
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...
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
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
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.
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.
Free download under CC Attribution (CC BY 4.0). Please credit the artist and rawpixel.com.
Collection of watercolor fruit paintings from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Pomological Watercolor Collection. These fruit and nuts illustrations were created from 1886–1942 with 7,584 watercolor paintings. We have selected some of these incredible paintings and digitally enhanced them into high-resolution images. They are free to download under the CC0 license.
Higher resolutions with no attribution required can be downloaded: https://www.rawpixel.com/board/1241571/watercolor-fruit-painting-collection-free-cc0-public-domain-paintings?sort=curated&mode=shop&page=1
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
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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=2009106828&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!