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  2. Cranberry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cranberry

    Cranberries are a group of evergreen dwarf shrubs or trailing vines in the subgenus Oxycoccus of the genus Vaccinium. Cranberries are low, creeping shrubs or vines up to 2 meters (7 ft) long and 5 to 20 centimeters (2 to 8 in) in height; they have slender stems that are not thickly woody and have small evergreen leaves. The flowers are dark pink.

  3. Quiz Time! Do Cranberries Grow on a Vine or Under Water? - AOL

    www.aol.com/quiz-time-cranberries-grow-vine...

    Cranberries are grown in the northern region of the United States on low vines in dry bogs. ... cranberries are picked dry off the vine. This process is used most often for those bags of fresh ...

  4. Millions will eat cranberry sauce on Thanksgiving. But where ...

    lite.aol.com/news/story/0001/20241127/b0eed6497a...

    The native wetland plants that produce cranberries start growing in May. When they are ready to be harvested, farmers flood their bogs with water and send out a picking machine to shake the berries from the vines. Then more water is added to the bog, and the freed cranberries float to the surface. “The season has been pretty good this year.

  5. Why Wisconsin is the cranberry capital of the US - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-wisconsin-cranberry-capital-us...

    Planted as vine cuttings from previous harvests in beds of peat and sand, cranberry vines take four to five years to mature. Once ready to harvest, the beds are flooded with water so that machines ...

  6. Some of those Ocean Spray cranberries come from a bog in ...

    lite.aol.com/entertainment/story/0001/20241127/b...

    The native wetland plants that produce cranberries start growing in May. When they are ready to be harvested, farmers flood their bogs with water and send out a picking machine to shake the berries from the vines. Then more water is added to the bog, and the freed cranberries float to the surface. “The season has been pretty good this year.

  7. 10 surprising facts about cranberries - AOL

    www.aol.com/2016-06-16-10-surprising-facts-about...

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  8. Vaccinium vitis-idaea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccinium_vitis-idaea

    It is known colloquially as the lingonberry, partridgeberry, [a] foxberry, mountain cranberry, or cowberry. It is native to boreal forest and Arctic tundra throughout the Northern Hemisphere. Commercially cultivated in the United States Pacific Northwest [ 4 ] and the Netherlands , [ 5 ] the edible berries are also picked in the wild and used ...

  9. Vaccinium oxycoccos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccinium_oxycoccos

    This cranberry is a small, prostrate shrub with vine-like stems that root at the nodes. The evergreen leaves are leathery and lance-shaped, up to 1.2 cm (1 ⁄ 2 in) long. [5] [7] The stems are a few centimeters tall, upon which are one to a few nodding flowers with four-petals. [7]