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My Super Farming System - Chapter 27
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Chapter 26
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... ty leaders were grappling with the issue of exorbitantly priced watermelons.
Watermelons were a common fruit; farmers would sell them for just three to five cents per kilogram.
In the city, prices were higher—about a dollar per kilogram in summer, with a slight increase in winter.
But never had they reached the astronomical price of five thousand dollars per melon.
The pricing itself was problematic—not by weight, but per melon, regardless of size, each for five t ...
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