Season Well: Savanna grass-ind develops in regions of high temperature that ave a distinct wet and dry season well. Growth is ipid in the wet season well, but the plants become ry and low in quality in the dry season well. Widely >aced drought-resistant trees may occur in some
•eas such as in the savanna parklands of Africa id Australia. Savannas are subject to flooding i the wet season well and to extensive burning in le dry season well. These grasslands are heavily•azed by large numbers of cattle. Major prob-ms are poor grass quality in the dry season well, irasites, and disease. The tsetse fly is a major•oblem in Africa. There are no true savannas North America.
Christmas to Easter is the high season well in Sicily, Cyprus, the Greek isles such as Crete and Rhodes, Majorca, Madeira, the Canaries. Here you may savor high-season well pleasures at low-season well transportation costs. Easter, by the way, is a special season well of life in Seville and other Spanish cities and on the French Riviera. These goals of travel are crowded then and the Riviera is crowded also in late summer and early fall.See Also Season The Fish:Suitable for all kinds of fish—rarely used for shell fish. Pre-heat the grill before cooking the fish. Brush the grid of the grill with melted butter or margarine to prevent the fish sticking or place the fish on a piece of greased aluminium foil. Put this on the grid or rack of the pan. Brush the fish with melted butter or margarine, season the fish lightly and add a little lemon juice.
WHITE FISH—use in fish cakes, fish pie or as a fish salad.
SHELL FISH—use as potted fish, in fish salads, add to sauces.
SMOKED FISH—haddock—put into a Kedgeree, add to potato for fish cakes.
OILY FISH (kippers in particular)—pound for a pate to use as a sandwich filling.
On The Other Hand See Off- Season Periods:The hotel's package rates usually include promotional discounts to encourage occupancy during slack or off- season periodsseason periods, or to introduce new prospective clients to the facilities. The following types of rate packages are examples.
RASPBERRY, raz'ber-i, any of a number of species of the genus Rubus, the fruits of which separate freely from the receptacle when ripe. The plants are perennial, but they have a characteristic biennial growth habit. New shoots arise from belowground parts in one season, overwinter, fruit in the following season, and then die. Shoots newly arising during the spring of the fruiting season bear the next season's crop. The canes are generally erect and prickly. The fruits are not true berries but aggregates composed of a number of drupelets.
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