The reference to horn and ivory show that composite bows were known, and the inclusion of yew shows they knew of this best of bow timbers. |
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We have tried growing variegated elder under ancient yew trees without success. |
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The gladdon is a good plant for dry shade and will thrive even under yew trees. |
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It's a technique that can be applied not only to yew but also to beech, privet, holly, hornbeam and box. |
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He was garbed in ranger clothes, with soft hide boots and a bow of yew in his hands. |
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Hidden away under a large yew tree was the privy or earth closet, our only toilet facilities. |
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Examples include taxol from the Pacific yew, curare from a group of South American shrubs, and aspirin, from the bark of willow trees. |
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Podocarpus macrophyllus, a relative of the yew, is also very forgiving, growing to only 15 ft, hardy and good in shade. |
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A lovely wall of stone and brick layers and fluted coping stones, with yew above, brought us into the Roman town of Isurium, now Aldborough. |
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Joyce advises on how to use everything from yew and ivy to honeysuckle to get the garden into shape. |
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It is a low creeping bush with needle-like leaves, somewhat like a prostrate yew. |
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These delicate blossoms are displayed to their best advantage by silhouetting them against a brick wall or a hedge of holly or yew. |
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Heralded as a breakthrough treatment for breast and ovarian cancer, taxol is found in the bark of the Pacific yew tree. |
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Using shelterbelts of yew, box and laurel they began collections of azaleas, magnolias, rhododendrons and camellias. |
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Since I have so much yew foliage, this is the mainstay of the ropes and swags that I will be creating. |
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Likewise, the center says certain plants are fatal if eaten, including azalea, oleander, sago palm and yew. |
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The ingestion of azalea, oleander, castor bean, sago palm, Easter lily or yew plant material by an animal can be fatal. |
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The others followed suit, some drawing swords, others fitting arrows into yew longbows. |
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The sweeping drive of the Coach Road to Milnerfield were planted with laurel, yew and holly, still surviving today. |
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The widely used anticancer drug was derived from the Pacific yew, a tree found in temperate rain forests. |
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The forest at Weston is over 30 acres and contains a whole variety of species but John's favourites are the hard woods like the elm and the yew. |
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Rev Snuggs claimed just three of the yew tree's poisonous berries would be enough to kill a child. |
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They cut away the dead wood, the ivy, the Russian vine, leaving a nearly naked yew and Scots pine, which may well survive and regenerate. |
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Species with random branching, such as arborvitae, juniper, yew, and false cypress, have limbs that occur all along the trunk. |
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Many of the needle evergreens including yew, arborvitae, hemlock, and incense cedar make fine hedges. |
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Our land is very flat, so I deliberately divided it up with hemlock, boxwood, and yew hedges. |
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However, a shortage of yew trees meant that ash, elm or wych elm were also used. |
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The native trees planted include oak, ash, birch, alder, hazel, yew, and Scots pine. |
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Just 14 acrres of broadleaf woodland remain, including oak, ash, alder and birch and several large yew trees. |
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The newly planted trees include oak, ash, Scots pine, yew, birch and alder. |
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Archers quickly exhausted quiver after quiver of arrows from their yew longbows. |
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Backed by a yew hedge are dozens of neatly planted rows of achilleas, euphorbias, iris and violas among others. |
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It was a three-quarter-acre garden with terraces, roses, yew hedges, box parterres, geraniums, pelargoniums and double herbaceous borders leading to a meadow planted with eucalyptus. |
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The needles of the yew tree can kill you, but the bark is important for many modern drugs. |
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So far, ramorum dieback has been found mostly on rhododendrons and viburnums, although it has also been identified on camellia, kalmia, pieris, syringa and yew. |
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My favourite woods are yew and ash, but I enjoy working with any wood. |
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I will also have to abandon plans for replacing the yew hedge. |
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Many gardens and parks contain poisonous plants such as yew and laburnum. |
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The second tincture, a combination of common mallow, English yew and yarrow called AMT, tackles the emotional and energetic causes of the condition. |
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Christopher knows his trade and selects his wood from birch, oak or yew. |
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The wood is bog yew and is carbon-dated to be over 4,500 years old. |
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It's a good time to plant holly and yew as well as hardy ferns. |
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The yew tree is found only in old-growth forests, so it has now become a potential problem, along with the spotted owl, in trying to save these forests. |
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The traditional yew bow of Europe acted as though it were a composite bow, as it was preferably made of a section of yew taken where the sapwood and heartwood joined. |
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To the front, a yew hedge is clipped into swags to mirror the ogee windows of the house, framing views of the Bringewood hills and Welsh Marches in the distance. |
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Over 100 longbows were found all made from fine-grained yew. |
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The most important is a Japanese yew, gathered from the wild and reputedly 600 years old. |
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In 1350 there was a serious shortage, and Henry IV of England ordered his royal bowyer to enter private land and cut yew and other woods. |
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This can have fatal results if yew 'berries' are eaten without removing the seeds first. |
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There was a tradition of planting yew trees in churchyards throughout Britain and Ireland, among other reasons, as a resource for bows. |
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A famous medical example is one promoting yew juice as a cure for snakebite. |
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The oldest surviving yew longbow was found at Rotten Bottom in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. |
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A further possible reason is that fronds and branches of yew were often used as a substitute for palms on Palm Sunday. |
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It has been suggested that the Sacred Tree at the Temple at Uppsala was an ancient yew tree. |
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In Asturian tradition and culture the yew tree has had a real link with the land, the people, the ancestors and the ancient religion. |
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Shaped box bushes, lavender and ionicera hedging combined with a grand yew, Chilean pine and magnolias give the gardens a sense of maturity. |
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The Florida yew, Mexican yew and Pacific yew are all rare species listed as threatened or endangered. |
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Those were the stories my mother told me, to keep me away from the water and its fringe of yew and turkey oak trees. |
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Taxus is a genus of small coniferous trees or shrubs in the yew family Taxaceae. |
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Potential choices for great evergreen hedges include yew, box, holly, Escallonia, Euonymus, Osmanthus, Portuguese laurel and Photinia. |
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The yew tree can often be found in church graveyards and is symbolic of sadness. |
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The site was Christianised during the Dark Ages, with the yew already full grown, perhaps because it was already a sacred place. |
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Today European yew is widely used in landscaping and ornamental horticulture. |
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In England, yew has historically been sometimes associated with privies, possibly because the smell of the plant keeps insects away. |
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Traditional mazes are most commonly grown using yew hedges, but these take several years to mature. |
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Species of tree and shrub include ash, downy birch, hazel, hawthorn, yew and rowan. |
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The powerful anti-cancer drug taxol is extracted from the leaves of the yew tree. |
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Beyond the formal gardens is an arboretum of specimen trees including wellingtonia, yew, oak and ash. |
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Ancient trees include Wellingtonia, weeping ash, beech, Spanish chestnut, sycamore, maple and lime together with oaks and yew. |
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Forestry records in this area in the 17th century do not mention yew, and it seems that no mature trees were to be had. |
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Last June, the drug taxol, derived from the Pacific yew tree, made headlines as a potent anticancer agent. |
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In 1423 the Polish king commanded protection of yews in order to cut exports, facing nearly complete destruction of local yew stock. |
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The island has a wide variety of trees, including native species of birch, beech, ash, hawthorn, elm, oak, yew, pine, cherry and apple. |
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Fatal poisoning in humans is very rare, usually occurring after consuming yew foliage. |
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The Kingley Vale National Nature Reserve in West Sussex has one of Europe's largest yew woodlands. |
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It is the tree originally known as yew, though with other related trees becoming known, it may now be known as English yew, or European yew. |
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During the Middle Ages elm was also used to make longbows if yew was unavailable. |
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An ash sheds its leaves in the winter, while yew trees retain their needles. |
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The boat was constructed of oak planks, stitched together with yew withies and also fixed together with wooden wedges. |
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Other yew species contain similar compounds with similar biochemical activity. |
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Hardy evergreens such as pyracantha, privet, laurel, yew, leyland cypress and western red cedar are fine, but be prepared to cover with fleece if severe frost occurs. |
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In Overton Village, the 21 tall, dark yew trees in the church of St Mary date from Medieval times, and the village itself is mentioned in the doomsday book. |
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It was already an ancient tree at the time of Richard II's proclamation that ordered the general planting of yews to support the army and the use of yew in the Longbow. |
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Symptoms of yew poisoning include an accelerated heart rate, muscle tremors, convulsions, collapse, difficulty breathing, circulation impairment and eventually cardiac arrest. |
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Ingestion and subsequent excretion by birds whose beaks and digestive systems do not break down the seed's coating are the primary means of yew dispersal. |
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In one instance, three Lipizzan horses died during a show after eating the leaves of a poisonous Japanese yew bush while awaiting the start of their performance. |
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The common yew was one of the many species first described by Linnaeus. |
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The word yew as it was originally used seems to refer to the color brown. |
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All species of yew contain highly poisonous alkaloids known as taxanes, with some variation in the exact formula of the alkaloid between the species. |
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Other species in the park include atlas cedar, Norway maple, snake bark maple, yew, laburnum, Japanese cherry, Austrian pine and plenty of wonderfully tall common lime trees. |
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Before the arrival of the first settlers in Ireland about 9,000 years ago, the land was largely covered by forests of oak, ash, elm, hazel, yew, and other native trees. |
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Cativolcus poisoned himself with a concoction from a yew tree. |
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European yew will tolerate growing in a wide range of soils and situations, including shallow chalk soils and shade, although in deep shade its foliage may be less dense. |
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She says Bristol-Myers Squibb, the producer of Taxol, partially synthesizes the drug, using material from other yew varieties to produce the compound. |
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The boat was made using oak planks sewn together with yew lashings. |
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In the wild, deer browsing of yews is often so extensive that wild yew trees are commonly restricted to cliffs and other steep slopes inaccessible to deer. |
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The more common Canada yew is also being successfully harvested in northern Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick, and has become another major source of paclitaxel. |
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