I went to my uncle Pete's farm, and I started planting Guava trees. I had to count out the seeds. I eventually counted 115. Once they grow, Pete keeps a couple and the rest he gives away or sells.
[Guava trees are great for agro-forestry, which means it is a blend of farming and keeping forests healthy because they are great nitrogen-fixer. This means they help keep the soil healthy. They also attract lots of birds and mammals.]
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| Here I am softening the soil and pulling out the weeds. |
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Here I am setting up the dirt. I have to set up the bags because
they need to collect rain. They need rain so that they can grow.
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| Here is Pete. Pete has the biggest, nicest farm I've seen in my entire life. |
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| Here is a guava seed. First we put them on top, and then we cover them up with a little bit of soil. They don't like to be packed down, and that's why I softened them up earlier. |
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| Here I am watering the guava seeds with cow-poopy water with a little bit of sugar and milk. This is Pete's homemade fertilizer. |
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| Here is the guava fruit itself. They have very sweet stuff around the seeds. You eat them like you are going to chew on a lollipop. After you suck the sugar off, you put the seeds into new soil. |








