Chippewa is a native American group living in North America. The basis of their living is to nurture corn, hunting, fishing, and cigarettes are self-entertainment. One day they found babies on the beach next to the canoe; they did not know where the baby came from, but the heart was filled with a gentle heart and they decided to nurture that baby did. They also believe that in order to nurture good young people, everyone in the village must take care of him and teach him how to become a good man. Because they were mainly by him, they gave grandma to grandma and his mother.
Wampanoags and Pequots, Massachusetts, Nausets, Nipmucks and Narragansets grow corn. As the main source of living for these tribes, maize is the focus of many legends. Naragunset 's belief teaches how Crows brought this grain to New England. Crow initially brought them from South Indian Great God Kautantouwits oilfield to one Indian corn fruit, the other Indian corn fruit, and all corn and beans. Celebrate the corn mother's gift: During the famine Indian women fell in love with snakes in the forest, one day the husband told them he found a secret and was chosen to save the tribe. She then dragged her body through clearing
Zea mays grass (grass) also known as Indian corn or corn and its edible cereals. Livestock crops are born in the Americas and are one of the most widely distributed crops in the world. Corn is used as livestock feed, human food, biofuels and industrial raw materials. In the US, a vivid variety of colorful lines known as Indian corn is traditionally used for autumn harvest decorations. About 10,000 years ago, corn was first grown by Mexican indigenous people. Native Americans taught European colonists to cultivate cereals and since mapping Christopher Columbus and other explorers to Europe, corn has spread to areas suitable for planting the world. In Canada and Russia, it grows from 58 degrees north to 40 degrees south, and maize crops mature almost every month around the world.