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Update on the Super Pigs
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<blockquote data-quote="DDB TX" data-source="post: 2982920" data-attributes="member: 64182"><p>You are right, the live or evergreen oaks in Texas are not Quercus ilex, the Mediterranean oak, or Q. rotundifolia, another southern European variety, which are the oaks in Spain, Italy, southern France where those delicious pigs are raised. The Eurpopean live or evergreen oaks are, however, pretty close cousins to Quercus fusiformis or Q. viginiana, both of which I have seen in central Texas. They all have similar oval, evergreen leaves, and their acorns are very similar as well. They are also all generally referred to as "evergreen oaks" or "live oaks" especially by non-biologists.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DDB TX, post: 2982920, member: 64182"] You are right, the live or evergreen oaks in Texas are not Quercus ilex, the Mediterranean oak, or Q. rotundifolia, another southern European variety, which are the oaks in Spain, Italy, southern France where those delicious pigs are raised. The Eurpopean live or evergreen oaks are, however, pretty close cousins to Quercus fusiformis or Q. viginiana, both of which I have seen in central Texas. They all have similar oval, evergreen leaves, and their acorns are very similar as well. They are also all generally referred to as "evergreen oaks" or "live oaks" especially by non-biologists. [/QUOTE]
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