McGrath, Lee and Gillespie will be back, and of course Bichel, Williams and Bracken will also be pegging away. |
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It was simple to follow, grooved by bikes, but easy walking and only briefly affected by bracken near Bracken Hill. |
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Bracken is cultivated commercially in America, Canada and Brazil as a remedy for bronchitis and parasitic worms. |
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Elsewhere, dozens of residents had to be evacuated in Gwent, Wales, where hundreds of mature trees, bracken, gorse and shrubs were destroyed. |
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Other weed species found include bracken, which is now associated with acidic grassland rather than arable fields. |
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Bracken and several other ferns are suspected of causing cancer. |
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Like adventurers, we followed him up and up through the bracken, heather and gorse, thrashing the undergrowth aside with sticks. |
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The British pteridologists have had lively discussions as to how many races of the bracken exist in western Europe and adjacent areas. |
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Given the sandy soils, the ground flora in these areas is dominated by bracken, wavy hair grass and common cow wheat. |
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Early nests are often in a shrub or on a bracken fern, and later nests are usually on the ground under a shrub, often a blueberry. |
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Creeping perennials, like clover or bracken, seem to move around in the environment. |
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After the logging and fires, resilient plants like fire cherry, bracken fern, and the heaths had reclaimed much of this broken landscape. |
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Shrouded in bracken and blackberry brambles is a bush dangling dozens of berries like Christmas tree ornaments. |
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The names bracken and brake are sometimes also applied to other large, coarse ferns and, as general terms, to a thicket of such plants. |
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Many ferns, such as false bracken, leather fern and Pteris cretica, are drought-tolerant once established. |
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This was a day of blinding heat amid the scent of mountain hay and the hillsides covered in bracken. |
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It is easy to think of a very young seedling as being an individual, but which is the individual bracken plant in a huge clonal patch of bracken? |
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They covered the bracken and clay and farms with houses that were built and sold to them by a coincidence of evangelicals. |
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Penn Common is a rolling meadow of tall bracken, moss and the odd thicket of birch trees. |
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The ground was overgrown with wide-spread bracken and tall, matured trees blocked the view to the surrounding buildings. |
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Another team were being lashed by bracken fronds and splashed with water as they tried to cross the beck while blinded by blackened goggles. |
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The other especially weedy fern is bracken, which also unusually for pteridophytes has vessels. |
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Return to the Southern Upland Way, and follow marker posts down through bracken and bog myrtle to a stile. |
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The bilberry bushes are just pushing through last year's flattened bracken and this year's rising heather. |
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You often pick up ticks when walking through bracken, and they're best removed quickly if they attach themselves to you. |
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Above hung the thymy hill where dry grasses and bracken murmured or screamed in the wind. |
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Common in the understory are chokecherry, beaked hazelnut, a wild rose, red baneberry, thimbleberry, and bracken. |
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There would be no one to manage the walls, some areas would revert to scrub and bracken and eventually trees. |
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Back on the winding road to Lancaster, the way is lined with purple heather and bracken, rowan trees and bushes full of blueberries. |
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This route led away from the lake through bracken and heather, over a ridge between two hills. |
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Where a cover of bracken is found, it provides nesting cover for other bird species, particularly whinchats and wheatears. |
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It is concluded that mosses suffer detrimental effects after exposure to Asulox at concentrations similar to those that affect fern gametophytes such as bracken. |
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Bracken is currently harvested in the Lake District, Cumbria, United Kingdom to make commercial composts. |
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The netminder took too long to make a pass and forechecker Bracken Kearns picked it off and shot into the net from a sharp angle. |
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He slept on bracken, the only concession to comfort a down quilt and a patch of woollen red plaid, often seen wrapped around him as he went about his business. |
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The few non-woody species include little bluestem, wintergreen, Virginia tephrosia, wild indigo, tall oatgrass, cowwheat, low frost weed, turkey beard, and bracken fern. |
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Aquarius Research Natural Area is particularly rich in ferns, including Western polypody, spreading woodfern, oak fern, male fern, bracken fern, and sword fern. |
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But I made it safely through the bracken and out the other side, and cut a wide arc back towards the car to continue my journey through the fields and flowers and trees. |
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I followed Sean away from the beach, down the sandy paths where the marram grass gave way to bracken and scrubby trees, deeper and deeper into the dunes. |
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Worldwide, the fiddleheads most commonly consumed are those of bracken. |
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He moved the event forward from its usual August date to May because later in the year the course is covered in bracken and it is difficult to overtake on the narrow paths. |
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It looked reasonable from a distance but the bracken was taller than both my daughters, and there were more than a few moments of blind panic on my part. |
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The bracken has turned the crag into deep rust swathes and the banks of trees brushed neatly back by the winds climb the hillside in rainbow shades of autumn. |
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Excavation ceased in the 1950s and the area is now overgrown with woodland, bracken and gorse which provides a habitat for birds, snakes and mammals. |
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After a chat we were on our way, most of the day's climbing done on a quiet kilometre of back road up the side of a valley otherwise chock-a-block with bracken. |
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He will construct a snake of leaves that flows down a river, a cone of bleached wood that will float away on the tide, a bracken sculpture that is broken by the wind. |
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There is something a little sinister about it, amid that green and fecund landscape, with its skirting of pine and silver birch and the furze and bracken above. |
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A quick and easy remedy for nettle stings is to rub bracken on the affected area. |
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Eating excessive quantities of bracken can cause beriberi, especially in creatures with simple stomachs. |
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Uncooked bracken contains the enzyme thiaminase, which breaks down thiamine. |
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The European adder can be found basking on bracken, the colour of their skin concealing them. |
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Various techniques are recommended by Natural England and the RSPB to control bracken either individually or in combination RSPB Bracken management in the uplands. |
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In cattle, bracken poisoning can occur in both an acute and chronic form, acute poisoning being the most common. |
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The juice it releases alleviates the sting, and bracken often grows near stinging nettle. |
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The area is wild and largely vegetated by heather about one metre thick, with some acidic grassland and bracken. |
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Some British birds such as the whinchat and the nightjar use bracken as their preferred habitats. |
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Climbing corydalis, wild gladiolus and chickweed wintergreen also seem to benefit from the conditions found under bracken stands. |
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Dead bracken provides a warm microclimate for development of the immature stages. |
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Herb and tree seedling growth may be inhibited even after bracken fern is removed, apparently because active plant toxins remain in the soil. |
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Both Camarographium stephensii and Typhula quisquiliaris grow primarily from dead bracken stems. |
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Woodland fungi can be found growing under the bracken canopy, for example Mycena epipterygia. |
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Bracken has been shown to be carcinogenic in some animals and some have suggested it could have some part in causing the high incidence of stomach cancer in Japan. |
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The loss and degradation of such areas due to the dominance of bracken has caused many species to become rare and isolated. |
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Inside the Cabinet, there was debate, instigated by Brendan Bracken, on 16 November 1942 over whether to publish the Report as a White Paper at that time. |
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Woods, hedgerows, mountain slopes and marshes host heather, wild grasses, gorse and bracken. |
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Global climatic changes have also suited bracken well and contributed to its rapid increase in land coverage. |
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Major understory plant species included sword fern, bracken fern, salal, Oregon-grape, vine maple, and oceanspray. |
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Vegetation cover across better drained areas includes bracken and heather, though much of the land is boggy, due to the high rainfall. |
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Special filters have even been used on some British water supplies to filter out the bracken spores. |
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The prolific gorse and bracken would be cut, dried and stored to be used as fuel, with farmhouses having purpose built furze ovens. |
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They may also be found growing under bracken or Japanese knotweed, perennial plants which also form stands with a dense summer canopy. |
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Hydrogen cyanide is released by the young fronds of bracken when eaten by mammals or insects. |
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The root systems of established bracken stands degrade archaeological sites by disrupting the strata and other physical evidence. |
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Many valley sides are now a mass of bracken with scattered hawthorn, much loved by whinchats. |
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The chambers are frequently lined with bedding, brought in on dry nights, which consists of grass, bracken, straw, leaves and moss. |
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We were was stopped in our tracks by what looked like a prehistoric relic keeking through the bracken. |
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I walked away from the fire and tore up green bracken, caw-cannying not to slash my fingers on stalks. |
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The nightjar may lay its eggs on the bare ground under the bracken. |
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Limestone scar, bracken, scrub and heather moorland can also be found. |
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When moorland is overgrazed, woody vegetation is often lost, being replaced by coarse, unpalatable grasses and bracken, with a greatly reduced fauna. |
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In pigs and horses bracken poisoning induces vitamin B deficiency. |
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