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Renston Rural Historic District is a national historic district located near Winterville, Pitt County, North Carolina.The district encompasses 105 contributing buildings, 6 contributing sites, 7 contributing structures, and 1 contributing object on eight major farms in rural Pitt County near Winterville.
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Winterville is a town in Pitt County, North Carolina, United States. The population was 10,462 as of the 2020 census . [ 4 ] The town is a part of the Greenville Metropolitan Area.
In 2018 USA Today named them one of the ten best vegan restaurants in the country, [13] and Insider named them the best vegan restaurant in North Carolina. [14] In 2019 Thrillist named Plant one of the 22 best vegetarian restaurants in the United States. [15] In 2023 VegOut Magazine said, "prepare to be amazed". [16]
Park Seed Company is an American mail-order and eCommerce seed company based in Greenwood, South Carolina founded in 1868. Park Seed specializes in garden seeds, offering more than 1,100 varieties of flower, vegetable, and herb seeds, plus a large selection of bulbs , live plants, and gardening accessories.
Cox-Ange House is a historic home located at Winterville, Pitt County, North Carolina. It was built about 1900 to 1904, and is a two-story, L-shaped, vernacular Queen Anne style frame dwelling with a one-story wing. An addition was built about 1910. It features a one-story, wraparound porch with a small sleeping porch on the second story.
Generally, seed packet labels include information covering: Common plant name and the botanical name (in parentheses). Spacing and depth: How deep to place the seeds in the soil, space between plants (from one row to the other one and from one plant to the other one in the same row). Height: Approximate height the plant will reach when mature.
Some seed swaps explicitly have a biological goal—usually either educating the public in organic gardening or the attempt to maintain crop diversity. [8] [14] [16] The larger global relevance and beneficial long-range effects of ecological farming sustained by seed swaps, and the effects of such practices in countering the effects of agrichemical monoculture, are beginning to be studied.