Showing posts with label Date Palm in Ancient Egypt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Date Palm in Ancient Egypt. Show all posts

Date Palm in Ancient Egypt

Date palm tree (Inside
tomb of Pashedu at
Deir el Medina)
The date palm is too well famous plants to need any general verbal description. Two kinds, however, flied high the wild and the broken. The wild variety grew from seeds, and often bore an enormous quantity of fruit. Dr. G. Wilkinson is confidence for the statement that a single bunch has been noted to check between 6,000 and 7000 dates, and as it is a common thing for a tree to take from 5 to 22 bunches, the average total is often from 30000 to 100000 dates per tree. The fruit is, though, small and of poor superb, and therefore it is not often met.

The cultivated variety was grown from off-shoots selected with care, planted out at regular musical intervals and abundantly irrigated. It began to bear in five or six years and continued productive for sixty or seventy.

The educated variety was grown from off-shoots elite with care, established out at regular intervals and abundantly irrigated. It got down to bear in 5 or 6 years and extended productive for 60 or 70.

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