this throughput rate was the bottleneck for drying berries to be loaded into bulk trucks or bagged. The processing rate of the three separator lines also affected the throughput rate as processing declined as the percentage of bad fruit increased. 1‚050 bbl x 22 hours = 23‚100 bbl. 3. The major reasons for the trucks waiting were because the holding bins became full and there was no place in the receiving plant to temporarily store berries before they could be further processed. Excessive
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approximately 1500 barrels of berries are input into the process per hour (18000barrels/12hrs). The capacity of the Kiwanee dumpers was given as 3000 b/hr.‚ and I was able to calculate the implied utilization by dividing the berry input rate by the capacity(1500bbl/hr divided by 3000bbl/hr). To calculate the actual utilization of the dumpers‚ you must first determine the flow rate of the system. Only 25% of the berries are dry and 75% are wet. This sums to 375 dry berries per hour (1500 input/hr x
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where rain would fall‚ and the sun would appear. Giving an imagery perspective from like three where is said "a glossy purple cloth" This line give you an idea of how bright and juicy this berry must be given that it is a metaphor to a blood clot meaning it is ripe and ready to be picked. Also‚ the other berries are not as ripe as this particular one‚ the one is hard and cannot eat or picked. "You ate the first one‚ and its flesh was sweet" This line is also a metaphor for a human‚ they contain blood
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"rat-grey fungus" gluts on it. It continues in the irritable‚ grouchy tone of an upset child - " It was not fair that all the lovely canfuls smelt of rot" and concludes in a more vague‚ foreboding‚ accepting tone‚ revealing that even the child knew the berries would not "keep". The lush rhythm and language of the poem leads to a generous‚ but slightly harsh mood‚ as if the reader is immersed in the "heavy rain and sun" of "late August". The longing for the blackberries is like a desire that is more in
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passionate recollection of the seasonal picking of blueberries. The time is late August‚ and in perfect harvest conditions of ‘heavy rain and sun‚ the blackberries would ripen’. The idealistic views of childhood are brought out in the description of the berries‚ conveying a sense of near perfection‚ ‘At first‚ just one‚ a glossy purple clot.. You ate that first one and its flesh was sweet’. The memory of the blueberries is so vivid that Heaney recounts the ‘stains’ left upon the tongue and even the ‘lust’
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Endeavor to confront Time’s scythe or surrender to fatalism? Compare and Contrast Shakespeare’s Sonnet 12 and Seamus Heaney’s Blackberry-Picking By Sally‚ Kuok Si Nok‚ School of Translation and Interpreting‚ Beijing Language and Cultural University Human in all ages races through lives in an everlasting fight against time. Men’s struggle against nature has been a timeless theme in the literary world. From the early 17th century Sonnet 12‚ Shakespeare’s "When I do count the clock that tells the
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family had a berry farm that started in Japan and a Polish family had a vineyard. Akio Suyematsu‚ second-generation Japanese American‚ his family owned a berry farm in Japan until World War Two happened. Akio and his family immagranted to America because of the war‚ there they met Gerard and his offerings of working together on his wine vineyard. The two combined the berries and the winery to make an even better use of the land. As a group we decided like the reading we would have berries but only to
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and grow mold. Heaney conveys this simple act in a very hauntingly beautiful yetand bittersweet‚ but also delves way while delving into a deeper understanding and connection to the bigger picture of life. Heaney tries to convey the fact that the berries went bad because the pickers were too greedy and selfish in their picking and hoarding. This can be connected to life‚ and give us the life lesson that greed is not a good trait to have‚ and it always comes with karma. He portrays this Tthrough his
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of the speaker. After the reader has visualized blackberries "red‚ green‚ hard as a knot" (l 4) and "briars scratched and wet grass bleached our boots" (l 10) it becomes much easier to also feel melancholy emotions‚ as does the speaker‚ hen these berries are gone. "I always felt like crying" (l 22) takes on meaning that the reader can relate to‚ he can also feel as if he is there. Heaney’s use of extremely odd metaphors such as "plate of eyes" (l 15) and a "rat-grey fungus" (l 19) seem to shock
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should look at the defining features of the flower. The species have sweetly scented bell shaped flowers that produce a sugary edible nectar. The fruit on the sweet honeysuckle consists of berries and they can be in various colors such as red‚ blue or black. The berries comprise of several seeds and the berries can be slightly poisonous or edible. This flower grows wildly in isolated areas of land such as forests‚ swaps or hills. These key terms: sweet‚ fragrant‚ delicate and veiled are the essence
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