Guiding her into a copse of trees, Gil looked down at Laurie's face, finding confusion in her knitted brow. |
|
Together we bounded over a meadow and parked the car on the edge of a copse. |
|
Neither of us said a word as we watched the bright flame devour the cold, stiff copse of our dead son. |
|
The Day Trekker the lumbar and is best suited for those looking for an easy, unencumbered ramble in their favorite piney copse. |
|
A spring was negotiated and a beech copse, and a roe deer stood still and camouflaged in tussocks of grass by a stream. |
|
Within minutes you will see our first objective, Wath Hill, a grassy mound with a copse. |
|
The approaching figures crashed through the underbrush of the nearby copse. |
|
While we waited for our tour guide, an Irishman named Willie Leahy, we were treated to lunch beneath a weeping copse of trees. |
|
The young great green macaw wobbled aerially into a nearby copse of trees, where it disappeared in the dense leaves, green vanishing into green. |
|
He glanced in the rearview mirror, watching the droolworthy vehicle disappear behind a copse of trees as he headed around a curve in the road. |
|
We met the volunteer reserve manager, Richard Headley, who immediately pointed out a group of sword leaved helleborines for which the copse is most famous. |
|
She didn't hear a single bird even though she stood in the middle of a small copse. |
|
In the distance, on a hill, we discover a copse of thousand-year-old dragon trees in the form of gigantic candelabra. |
|
Bluebells, wild garlic and orchids grew in the copse behind me. |
|
Cindy swallowed and nodded without a word as the two of them headed across the cropped green lawn toward a small gazebo nestled underneath a copse of danra trees. |
|
As one approaches the copse of trees at the entrance to Tobernalt, one usually stands still by a large rock to look around in the shady dim light. |
|
Back down along the Orontes, very early the day before, my friend dropped me off on a dirt track by a copse of trees. |
|
The path drops down to a copse where you follow South Downs Way markers to reach a crossroads. |
|
In her tiny showing, her rose paintings seem as wispy as the aquarelles of some cooing Edwardian maiden lady celebrating the beauties of copse and dell. |
|
The trail goes through a poplar grove and continues though a kermes oak copse and then zigzags up a steep stony slope. |
|
|
Coming near a copse I was going to halt when I observed a few enemies at the end of the copse. |
|
Two days ago, Noel had ridden out with the stable master, and together they had found the copse of trees Erik had been so eager to show his young wife. |
|
That night they slept under a copse of low trees that hopefully concealed their whereabouts to any watching eyes in the tower that they now felt was very near. |
|
The sun had begun to slip behind the copse of trees just beyond the parking lot, the rich crimson and honey folding and unfolding into one another. |
|
Further away, in a copse, I discovered the base of your caravan, and I had the impression I had arrived too late after some drama. |
|
Walk past a copse on the right side, and a vineyard on the left side. |
|
Many different styles are to be seen in the garden, which is on three levels and has a copse. It is representative of various European gardens of that period. |
|
In a coppiced wood, which is called a copse, young tree stems are repeatedly cut down to near ground level, known as a stool. |
|
A tracksuited man with a face like a wolf is running a jagged path from copse to copse. |
|
Gardeners have also introduced red campion, nettle-leafed bellflowers, greater stitchwort, foxglove and agrimony to the copse. |
|
Police have been searching a disused brickworks and a surrounding copse and lake near Norton Barracks in Worcestershire. |
|
Elwood Plunker, crawled a few feet closer from his lookout position in the copse. |
|
Striking the highway beyond the little copse she skirted the dark iron palings enclosing Hare. |
|
These, seeing the boldness of our men, abandoned the fort and fled southwards to the shelter of a copse. |
|
She arrives at a copse of trees, where she spots Luke. |
|
Yet there we were – a respectable family of four – parking our car near the petrol pumps and making swiftly for the cover of a copse of pine trees to get undressed. |
|
An orchard and a copse complete the property. |
|
This is inferred from the etymology of the name, which, according to one theory, is resolvable into two Gaelic terms signifying a castle or fort in the copse or brushwood. |
|