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Hunting Season Sometimes:

Hunting Season Sometimes These were known as wigwams and were constructed by the women, who carried the birch bark in rolls from one campsite to another. The Chippewa's main subsistence was hunting season sometimes, fishing, and collecting wild plant food, although some of the southern groups had a limited maize agriculture. Maple sugar and wild rice were harvested regularly. Each season the headman divided the maple groves and rice beds into allotments to be harvested by individual families. The Chippewa's dependence on hunting season sometimes and trapping resulted in their having a loose social organization and enabled small groups to function alone for long periods of time.

Favored water sports include swimming, sailing, rowing, fishing, water skiing, and skin diving. Clubs specializing in gymnastics, judo, karate, fencing, flying, and gliding flourish, and there is a hard core of upper- and upper-middle-class people who indulge in the oft-criticized hunting season sometimes sports of coursing, beagling, otter hunting season sometimes, stag hunting season sometimes, and shooting (pheasant, partridge, pigeons, and rabbits).


Savanna grass-ind develops in regions of high temperature that ave a distinct wet and dry season. Growth is ipid in the wet season, but the plants become ry and low in quality in the dry season. 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 and to extensive burning in le dry season. These grasslands are heavily•azed by large numbers of cattle. Major prob-ms are poor grass quality in the dry season, irasites, and disease. The tsetse fly is a major•oblem in Africa. There are no true savannas North America.
 
 
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