before they can unload their berries; 2) The overtime costs are too high; 3) The grading process of the berries is inadequate. Question 2 Question 3 Process Flow Diagram for wet and dry cranberries Working Note: Arrival of berries- In the process fruit‚ first berries are arrived on receiving plant no.1. In which‚ average truck delivery was 75bbls. Capacity of Temporary Holdings- 27 bins are used for holding both dry and wet berries. In which‚ 1-24 holding bins
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involves 18‚000 barrels of berries‚ 70% of them wet harvested‚ arriving uniformly over a twelve-hour period from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.‚ and process initiates as soon as the first truck arrives. a) At what time during the day‚ would the trucks start queuing up to upload? Answer: - Trucks carrying wet berries will have to wait to unload during the day because the incoming arrival rate is 1050 is greater than processing rate 600. The Trucks arriving with dry berries will not have to wait as
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This project is about is focused thimbleberry and picking berries in general in the Upper Peninsula. One part of the project is on my family and our folk tradition of picking thimbleberries. I will also be using the books Between the Iron and the Pine by Lewis C. Reimann and Sagas from Sisula by Jingo Viitala Vachon. These books have some stories about berry picking that I can relate and compare my own experiences to. Lastly‚ I’ll be using an article about Jason Anderson’s master’s degree project
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and gathering blackberries to sell. When standing on the road to sell the berries a car comes by‚ the child soon then snaps back to reality knowing that the boy and girl are better off. In the poem it deals with loss of childhood‚ social class‚ and guilt. At the beginning of the poem it states “at ten I’d still hold out my hands” (Komunyakaa 130). This is insisting that even before ten the child has been picking berries. The child in the poem did not have a regular childhood like the other children
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to find out the process capacity and flow rate. Process Num of machine Capacity per machine (bbls/hr) Total capacity (bbls/hr) 1 Truck arrive 8 75bbls/truck 600 2 Dumping 5 600 3000 3 Dry berry holding 16 250 4000 4 Dry/wet berry holding 8 250 2000 5 Wet berry holding 3 400 1200 6 Destoning 3 1500 4500 7 Dechaffing 3 1500 4500 8 Drying 3 200 600 9 Separating 3 400 1200 During peak period 9/20-10/9 Average daily deliveries = 16‚380 bbls/day
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Metaphor in Galway Kinnell’s Blackberry Eating Written in 1980‚ Galway Kinnell’s Blackberry Eating is a poem which creates a strong metaphoric relationship between the tangible objects of blackberries‚ and the intangible objects of words. The speaker of the poem feels a strong attraction to the sensory characteristics (the touch‚ taste‚ and look) of blackberries. The attraction he feels at the beginning of the poem exclusively for blackberries is paralleled in the end by his appetite and
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the child to remember. Lines 10-15 describes this experience as they “picked until the cans were full” and “until the tinkling bottom had been covered// with green ones‚” these images convey that these berries although some aren’t ready‚ these children don’t mind they just want to pick these berries. Yet afterwards “a rat-grey fungus” grows and “the fruit fermented‚ the sweet flesh would turn sour‚” the memories of childhood has rotten and the child “felt like crying” because “it wasn’t fair.” Life
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is to buy and install two new dryers‚ and to convert dry berry holding bins so that they can store either water-harvested or dry berries. Schaeffer asked his assistant Mel O’ Brien to take a hard look at the that operation and find out what NCC need to do to improve operations before 1971 crop comes in. One of the most important trends of cranberry industry was the increasing mechanization of cranberry harvesting. Water-harvested berries became more and more popular. This would challenge RP1’s
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the intangible objects of words. He feels an attraction to blackberries such as with taste‚ touch‚ and appearance. That notion is supported throughout the poem. For example‚ line 7 states the following: "Lifting the stalks to my mouth‚ the ripest berries‚" illustrating his love for the taste of delectable fruits. Furthermore‚ it demonstrates the sensory characteristics of touch‚ for he physically touches and eats the fruit. In a strange way‚ readers taste and touch the fruit too with Kinnell’s expressions
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an Acai bowl. It can be described as a crunchy‚ chewy smoothie in a bowl. Acai bowls can be eaten as a meal for breakfast‚ lunch‚ or dinner. It especially makes a great snack for Guam’s hottest days. It is easy to make‚ good for energy‚ and delicious. To start off‚ the main ingredient to the Acai bowl are the Acai berries. The Acai berry is gathered from the Acai palm tree‚ which is indigenous to Central and South America. The berries are then produced into a puree to use for smoothies. Acai berries
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