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Unique Home Furniture, Home Decorating and Home Decoration Store

Young Green Cones:

Young Green Cones In the wild, tree squirrels feed on young green cones, fungi, nuts, buds, seeds, berries, some insects, birds' eggs, and young birds. In captivity, well-balanced diet absolutely essential. REQUIRES DAILY: Seeds—Offer sunflower seeds, whole oats, wheat, melon seeds, corn and seed mixes prepared for any of the larger birds; hamster mix may be used. Fruits—All kinds, especially melons, in season; apples and oranges in winter; cultivated mushrooms. Green food—Must be varied; offer young growth or buds of plants, trees, and shrubs; blossoms of clover and alfalfa; green weed seeds; carrot tops and young carrots; lettuce and young weed growth. Water—Must be fresh, clean, always available; use water bottle.

REQUIRES DAILY: Seeds—Prepared hamster mix; buy at pet shop. Fruits—Melons and all other kinds of fruit in season; apples and oranges in winter. Green food—Must be varied; offer young plant buds, blossoms of clover and alfalfa, green weed seeds, carrot tops and young carrots, lettuce, and very young weed growth. Water— Must be fresh, clean, available at all times; use water bottle.

See Also Green Vegetable:

On the way to the pond we walked through the copse behind the vegetable garden and saw the green vegetable, leathery blades of the Christmas fern poking up through the cover of snow. Though some individual leaflets were somewhat tattered and torn, they were still green vegetable.

Significant advances were made in the manu¬facture of inexpensive "textured vegetable pro¬teins," which look and taste like meat and that have a reasonably good nutritional value. These foods were manufactured primarily from purified vegetable proteins (such as soybean protein), in a process in which the vegetable material is treated with alkali and forced through orifices as small as one-thousandth of an inch or less. The cost of the protein was potentially one-fifth to one-half that of red meats.


On The Other Hand See Green Corridor':

The winning entry will illustrate a design that has intergenerational appeal, enhances the residents' daily quality of life, and can stimulate and contain a variety of cultural events. The neighborhood is located along Chicago's newly dedicated 'Green Corridor' which is bounded by two pivotal landmarks: the Garfield Park Conservatory at the west and the Chicago Center for Green Technology (CCGT) at the east. The neighborhood has been identified in the City of Chicago/Local Initiatives Support Council (LISC) New Communities Program.

Through the exhibition and related programming, The Green House will explore developments in sustainability and will provide an informative overview of this dynamic design movement. This exhibition will take a look at some questions home-owners often ask when considering a green home or product, including: What makes a product green? How is a green home healthier, safer, and more comfortable? and How much does it cost to 'go green?'
 
 
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