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Practice Test 2
F:
So that’s why banana plantations are usually on hillsides, is it?
M:
Yes. They grow best like that.
F:
That’s interesting!
M:
If you plant them in rich soil and give them plenty
of water at the beginning
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of summer, then they should be well advanced by the beginning of winter
when growth virtually stops.
But in a country like England, theyre hard to
grow, although you
can
grow them in a hothouse.
F:
But in Australia, its not difficult?
M:
No, though even here, the growers put plastic bags around the bunches to
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protect them and keep them warm. If you go up to the banana growing
districts, youll see all these banana trees with plastic bags on them.
F:
But how do they stop the bananas going bad before they reach the shops?
M:
Well, the banana bunches are picked well before the fruit is ripe. Once you
cut the bunch, the bananas stop growing but they do continue to ripen. The
interesting thing is that once one banana ripens, it gives off a gas which then
helps all the others to ripen so they pretty much all ripen within a few hours
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of each other.
F:
Amazing! So do we export lots of bananas overseas, to Europe and Asia for
instance?
M:
Well, oddly enough, no. I believe New Zealand takes a small proportion of
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the crop but otherwise theyre mostly grown for the domestic market, which
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is surprising when you think about it because we grow an enormous number
of bananas each year.
F:
Yes, well thank you for all that information. Im sure the tutorial paper will
go really well you certainly seem to have done your research on the subject.
M:
Lets hope so.
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