KF7TBA+K7LWA's Friday Insomniac-Net BLOG

KF7TBA+K7LWA's Friday Insomniac-Net BLOG
Have we got some really, really good Qs&As for you!

Friday, August 29, 2014

2014[35]A -- Ins-Net As for Aug 29, 2014_Mixed Bag #21: "There's an Ananas Among Us!" [ A - B - A ]

Insomniac-Net ANSWERS -- Friday[35], Aug 29, 2014 [ A - B - A ]
Tonight's Topic: "Mixed Bag of 3 Trivia Questions -- #21: "There's an Ananas (comosus) Among Us!"
Answers = [ A - B - A ]
Good morning/evening, everybody! Thank you for joining us last night.
    We hope you discovered something interesting during the time we spent together on the Insomniac Net last night.
Thanks to you all for playing along -- it was a lot of FUN for us. Hopefully, you had fun too!
        -- The ever-delightful Shelley [KF7TBA] and LW [K7LWA]
Remember, you can get these Questions & Answers at Yahoo Group's Insomniac-Net Messages Link
OK -- just in case you can't check in ON AIR tonight...
Just email us with your answers to: K7LWA.INS@gmail.com
(please note, YAKhoo won't redirect correctly)
K7LWA.INS -at- gmail.com
NOTE: Be sure to check out
the Pineapple --
Ananas (comosus) & other Bromeliad photos
and more info about our Qs & As on

KF7TBA+K7LWA's Friday Insomniac-Net BLOG
(http://k7lwa-ins.blogspot.com/)
    Since LW is a Life Member (1976) of the Bromeliad Society International (BSI) and he really, really likes eating pineapple -- well, guess what?
    Yep, you guessed it (and you're off to a really great start!) -- because, for tonight's net, we will be asking you just 3 simple Pineapple questions.
    Perhaps you may already know that the most identifiable bromeliad, the pineapple, is classified as a perennial herb in the botantical family Bromeliaceae.
    For those of you living in the Southeast USA, another common bromeliad can be found there hanging from trees; it's called "Spanish Moss".
    And bromeliads can be found almost everywhere -- especially in shopping malls decorated with those vase-shaped pla
nts (Aechmea fasciata) that have a showy pink stalk with purple flowers sticking out of their center. Many homes in Florida, Hawai'i, and California use bromeliads on patios and in gardens.
       ++ "Mixed Bag of 3 Trivia Questions -- #21: ""There's an Ananas (comosus) Among Us!"" ++
Question #1: The pineapple fruit that we buy and eat is actually a fusion of berrylike fruitlets that developed from flowers on the end of a stem that spikes above the pineapple plant -- TRUE or FALSE?
        A. True, or
        B. False
        "The fruit is a terminal cylindrical, compound structure at the apex of the stem and is formed by the fusion of the berrylike fruitlets that develop from the flowers. At its apex, the fruit bears a compressed, leafy shoot called a crown." Fruits and Nuts. Oct. 2002. F&N-7 p4(1)
Question #2: Like all bromeliads, the pineapple produces 3-petal flowers (about 100-200 per plant) that develop many seeds. In Hawai'i, for example, growing new pineapples from seed is the most economical way to propagate new pineapple crops  -- TRUE or FALSE?
        A. True, or
        B. False
        "Crowns are currently the preferred planting material in Hawaii. They are twisted from the fruit at the time of harvest. The wound is allowed to dry (“cure”) for one to two weeks or, more commonly in Hawaii, the crowns are dipped in fungicide and planted soon after harvest. The chance of rot is reduced by trimming the crown butt to remove fruit tissue high in sugars. Crowns grow more slowly and are less drought resistant than slips but may have the potential to develop better root systems. Crowns should be graded by weight to minimize variability in the field." Fruits and Nuts. Oct. 2002. F&N-7 p5(1)
Question #3 Another way to propagate pineapples -- and one that you can do yourself with a fresh pineapple -- is to twist off the leafy crown from the fruit, let the crown dry for about 2 weeks, and then pot it up like a common houseplant -- TRUE or FALSE?
        A. True, or
        B. False
        Dole Plantation -- GROW YOUR OWN PINEAPPLE(2). Also, check out: 
DOLE - Growing Pineapples - YouTube
[SOURCES: ]
(1) Fruits and Nuts. Oct. 2002. F&N-7. Pineapple Cultivation in Hawaii*. Duane P. Bartholomew, Kenneth G. Rohrbach, and Dale O. Evans (PDF).
(2) Dole Plantation info: GROW YOUR OWN PINEAPPLE
(3) General economic botany info: PINEAPPLE--THE PLANT THAT ATE HAWAI'I
=================
++ Pineapple JOKE OF THE DAY ++ --
Q: Why did the pineapple stop in the middle of the road?
A: Because it ran out of juic
e
[SOURCE: http://www.jokes4us.com/miscellaneousjokes/foodjokes/pineapplejokes.html]
Background info: Why Bromeliad? -- LYMAN B. SMITH
    "Obviously "Bromeliad" is simply a shortening of the scientific name "Bromeliaceae" to indicate any member of the Pineapple family. We might call them all pineapples since they are members of that family, and not bother to find a new term. However, it would cause confusion to associate such diverse forms as the giant Puya and the Spanish Moss under a name for which we have already a sharp and narrow concept...."
Pronunciation Guide (from BSI Journal):
Ananas -- anay' nas is strictly correct, but ananas pronounced like the word bananas is permissible.
comosus -- koh moh' sus

The word: BROMEL-IAD -- The name of this family (Bromeliaceae) is derived from a man's name Mr. Olof Bromelius, a Swedish botanist of the 17th century. We pronounce it with the accent on the EL — BROMEL. The IAD is the horticultural tag that says, simply, "belonging to".


==============
Thank you!
Shelley [KF7TBA] & LW [K7LWA]
K7LWA.INS@gmail.com
( K7LWA.INS -AT- gmail.com )
(please note, YAKhoo won't redirect correctly)
Posted 2014-08-30 01:455PT
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