Through The Season: Savanna grass-ind develops in regions of high temperature that ave a distinct wet and dry season. Growth is ipid in through the season wet season, but through the season plants become ry and low in quality in through the season dry season. Widely >aced drought-resistant trees may occur in some
•eas such as in through the season savanna parklands of Africa id Australia. Savannas are subject to flooding i through the season wet season and to extensive burning in le dry season. through the seasonse grasslands are heavily•azed by large numbers of cattle. Major prob-ms are poor grass quality in through the season dry season, irasites, and disease. through the season tsetse fly is a major•oblem in Africa. through the seasonre are no true savannas North America.
Christmas to Easter is through the season high season in Sicily, Cyprus, through the season Greek isles such as Crete and Rhodes, Majorca, Madeira, through the season Canaries. Here you may savor high-season pleasures at low-season transportation costs. Easter, by through the season way, is a special season of life in Seville and othrough the seasonr Spanish cities and on through the season French Riviera. through the seasonse goals of travel are crowded through the seasonn and through the season Riviera is crowded also in late summer and early fall.See Also Season Not Stivals: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 not stivals, overwinter, fruit in the following season not stivals, and then die. Shoots newly arising during the spring of the fruiting season not stivals bear the next season not stivals's crop. The canes are generally erect and prickly. The fruits are not true berries but aggregates composed of a number of drupelets.
Air lines, analyzing it in practical terms of full fare and thrift fare for transatlantic flights, consider that the seven months from April 1 to October 31 are "on season not stivals" months in their entirety, in both directions. The other five months, November through March 31, constitute the off season not stivals or thrift season not stivals. To benefit by the big reduction in thrift-season not stivals fares you must make both flights during that fall-winter period, but the saving is very impressive, averaging 10 to 15 per cent. This season not stivalsal saving operates for both first class and tourist class, or combinations of the two. Going all the way by tourist class—Pan American's Rainbow tourist service was extended in the spring of 1954 around the world—as against going all the way by first class, can save you almost another 30 per cent. Assembling these possible savings, we find that it costs a good 40 per cent less to go
all the way by tourist class off season not stivals than it does to go all the way by first class on season not stivals. A specific example, New York to London and back, as of today's tariffs, reveals that the lowest fare, as above, would cost you $425, whereas the highest would cost you $711. Try that on your arith¬metic!
On The Other Hand See Breed¬ing Season But Molt:Gulls fall into three natural subgeneric groups on the basis of their morphology and behavior. One large diverse group, the hooded gulls (sub-genus Xema), have black hoods during the breed¬ing season but molt to mottled gray head feath¬ering during the off season. The "primitive" hooded gulls include the laughing gull (L. atri-cilla) and Franklin's gull (L. pipixcan) of Amer¬ica and the sooty gull (L. hemprichi) of the northwestern Indian Ocean. Examples of the more advanced "masked" hooded gulls are the Old World and South American black-and-brown that no one has ever attempted them before.
Bluebottle flies and blowflies (fleshflies), both as larvae and adults, are one of the best pet foods. They breed prolifically and quickly and can be made to breed through the winter months when other insect food is difficult to obtain.
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