To make a good return from markets, you need to have spring, summer, autumn and winter crops. |
|
In the early spring, flamingos land on the salt flats while in the autumn, the Cypriots celebrate the harvest of the vines with a wine festival. |
|
Maunder explained that flea eggs, the worm-like larvae, are born in autumn and survive in nests around the household over winter. |
|
The charity Family Matters York is offering a two-hour budgeting course free for students going up to university this autumn. |
|
Episodes of psychosis recurring each autumn sounds like an extreme version of seasonal affective disorder. |
|
As autumn approaches, truckloads of kangris of all qualities and hues come to the market. |
|
Yes, the climate is extreme, but there is a definite autumn, winter, spring and summer thanks to the Gulf Stream, which washes the coastline. |
|
This product does not keep, and is mainly produced in the autumn and winter. |
|
You can help control it by raking up and disposing of the fallen leaves in autumn. |
|
Visitor centre volunteer Eric Cowham admires autumn sycamore leaves at the Arboretum Gardens, Castle Howard. |
|
It is a beautiful variety about 6m tall, with leaves warmly yellow in the autumn. |
|
And, as we cheered him around the country, in a sense we cheered ourselves in the autumn glow of his confirmation. |
|
As autumn shows its tail, osmanthus flowers wither but the scent lingers, though not as fragrant as before. |
|
The Castle's gardens lie in a dramatic ravine which was once a quarry, and are particularly pretty in autumn. |
|
The shop will be jam packed with donated goods ranging from autumn skirts, to jackets and rainwear. |
|
The first beavers could arrive in Britain by autumn and would be released after six months in quarantine. |
|
Her father was rearrested in autumn 1935, held in Butyrka prison for a few months, and then exiled again, this time to Kazakhstan. |
|
The academic year began in autumn 2001 with warnings of an exodus of teachers from the classroom. |
|
The Everyman Theatre in Cheltenham has launched its autumn season brochure to help give audiences a warm glow when the summer sun fades. |
|
The constant worry of a repeat of autumn 2000 is the lasting legacy of the floods. |
|
|
However, this Committee was not reconstituted after the Cabinet changes last autumn. |
|
The date of the roadworks could be put back to the autumn if that date is preferred. |
|
It takes no time at all to prepare and is a hearty and satisfying autumn or winter meal. |
|
It was a grand day, too, autumn cold, dry, and with bright sunshine to lift the spirits. |
|
Cuttings should be left in place until autumn next year, when they can be lifted and transplanted. |
|
Sow more rocket and other autumn salads such as escarole and radicchio, which will last until Christmas. |
|
Texas has youth-only autumn hunting seasons for squirrel, whitetail deer, Rio Grande turkey and waterfowl. |
|
Her main target is to regain the world No 1 spot she held for three weeks in the autumn. |
|
It is understood that the proposals will form part of a White Paper on schools for publication by Education Secretary Ruth Kelly in the autumn. |
|
When the tourists pour in to see the autumn leaves, traffic on Skyline Drive can be a bit much. |
|
In its policy review this autumn, the Labour party needs to make some imaginative leaps to re-energise its programme. |
|
In sunny spring, the location serves as Paris and in misty autumn it acts as London. |
|
The six giant grey cattle thundered along the embankment, their nostrils jetting steam in the cold air of a Hungarian autumn morning. |
|
It certainly looks like a scarf that would be perfect for an Albertan autumn. |
|
We are at the tail end of what is officially the driest autumn and winter on record. |
|
They milk 150 Jerseys but plan to increase the herd size to 180 this autumn. |
|
A word with Ancient Greek origins, psithurism is defined as the rustling whispers of the trees on a windy, autumn day. |
|
During the autumn, the foliage of tricolour sage and ajuga becomes burnished with bronze, plum, and garnet. |
|
A simpler way to prune these raspberries is to cut the whole planting to the ground in autumn. |
|
Again, as in other pieces, the autumn poem uses quietude, fine enjambment and spacing, to convey the weight of the branches, the dying process. |
|
|
It showed the disease was still prevalent in the run-up to autumn and had not been killed off by recent warm weather, he said. |
|
The aesthetically perfect world of Los Nubes is perpetually aglow with the warm light of an autumn sunset, or dramatic moonlight. |
|
Motorists will be banned from picking up passengers at the kerbside until the work is completed in the autumn. |
|
The acer seems unable to make up its mind, turning a few leaves over to autumn red while still making new green leaf at the tips of its branches. |
|
Birders generally watch shorebirds in summer, raptors in autumn, and waterfowl in winter. |
|
The parks department created displays of autumn flowers, including chrysanthemums, Michaelmas daisies, and geraniums. |
|
Moreover, as the exhibitions of his work this autumn prove, he was an outstanding draughtsman and watercolourist. |
|
Merger plans will form part of a vote on whether people want a wholescale re-organisation of local government, due to take place next autumn. |
|
As summer merges into autumn the grey squirrels are on the go again. |
|
Jeff found Adam in front of his house, raking up autumn leaves. |
|
The same tree withers, droops and drops the dead leaves in autumn. |
|
Preziosa has small mophead flowers that are usually a mix of pink, white and red that never get very blue even on acid soils and that turn crimson in autumn. |
|
The centerpiece of the meal, a juicy autumn vegetable ragout with white beans, butternut squash, and kale, is served over a mound of soft polenta. |
|
The group will be looking at ways and means to drum up support for the marathon and also organising things for next autumn when the group will reassemble. |
|
From the vineyards of France to the olive groves of Spain, hundreds of thousands of people will be toasting the fruits of the earth this autumn, and you can join them. |
|
Summer is over, and autumn is a whirl of activities at our house. |
|
Psithurism happens a lot in New England, especially in the autumn. |
|
A sunny, rain washed morning on the cusp between summer and autumn is pretty close to heaven in my book, and a wonderful, crispy-clean way to start the day. |
|
Richard plans to hold regular readings throughout the autumn. |
|
An early autumn sun lit up cobblestone streets, tall acacia trees, and handsome and nearly all decayed 19th-century buildings. |
|
|
In autumn 1809 he reconnoitred the area between Lisbon, Torres Vedras, the Atlantic coast, and the river Tagus accompanied by Col Richard Fletcher, his chief engineer. |
|
In autumn, the kitchen had to serve squash soup to visiting Korean dignitaries. |
|
For William Clark, writing in his journal, the memorable sights of that autumn day in 1804 consisted mainly of animal migrations. |
|
If the chemistry department plans are approved the demolition of the existing single-storey building, along with the neighbouring water tower, could start this autumn. |
|
Standing in the chill breeze of autumn, I knew something had passed between us. |
|
In autumn the mudflats host migrant shorebirds including plovers, yellowlegs, and sandpipers, and warblers are common in woodlands at both ends of the pond. |
|
Try bulbs, wallflowers and pansies in spring, summer bedding for the hotter months, autumn and winter interest from chrysanthemums and foliage plants. |
|
Dressed up warmly in an Arran cardigan and Wellington boots, the two-year-old appears to be having a genuinely wonderful time playing in the red and gold autumn leaves. |
|
It could be the beautiful autumn sunshine glistening off mountains of green and red apples which has brought about this unusual state of contemplation. |
|
After classical music, folk, world music, show songs, digital arts and jazz, the National Centre for Early Music is adding another string to its bow this autumn. |
|
This is rich ground, regularly fertilised by wind-borne shell sand and grazed by cattle, producing an abundance of wild flowers from spring until autumn. |
|
She once again inhaled the autumn air and then jumped back in her car. |
|
From the first shots of autumn Sonata it's clear that this is going to be slow going. |
|
This autumn you will have to wade through Harris Tweed fashion features in the top style magazines and on the racks of the most expensive designer stores. |
|
Another summer has passed, and with its passing the rites of autumn have begun. |
|
Obviously the midge problem is worse early in the autumn and late in the spring, especially in woody areas or away from the coast where there's generally a breeze. |
|
The summer heat is fleeting, and the crisp golden brown of autumn lingers just a little bit longer than it should. |
|
The three autumn tests held at Murrayfield during November yielded wins over Argentina and Tonga, and a narrow defeat against New Zealand. |
|
When nations set fixed election dates, these are usually midweek during the spring or autumn to maximize turnout. |
|
Alexander artfully prolonged the talks until the autumn storms should begin. |
|
|
By the autumn of 1942, the arrival of the USAAF 8th Air Force and its daylight bombers would add bomber escort to Fighter Command's tasks. |
|
Through the summer and autumn of 1940 in the Battle of Britain, Dowding's Fighter Command resisted the attacks of the Luftwaffe. |
|
The autumn lantern project is a celebration of the lanternmakers and the people of Carrick. |
|
The moult, initiated by photoperiod, starts earlier in autumn and later in spring at higher latitudes. |
|
There is a smaller courting peak in autumn, which serves to delineate the territories for the winter months and the next season. |
|
Males also sport a mane running down the back, which is particularly apparent during autumn and winter. |
|
Such food is favoured in early spring and summer, but may also be eaten in autumn and winter during beechnut and acorn crop failures. |
|
This theme also occurs in Irish and Egyptian mythology, where the animal is explicitly linked to the month of October, therefore autumn. |
|
Parts of the world that have showy displays of bright autumn colors are limited to locations where days become short and nights are cool. |
|
Female strobili initiated during late summer or autumn in a year, then overwinter until the following spring. |
|
Fertilization takes place by early summer of the 4th year and seeds mature in the cones by autumn of the 4th year. |
|
In the autumn, Owain's Aberystwyth Castle surrendered while he was away fighting. |
|
In autumn 1241, he left Syria and joined King Henry's campaign against King Louis IX in Poitou. |
|
A leadership election will be held in the autumn of 2017 to choose a new leader. |
|
This is a gregarious species, which can be seen in large numbers from boats or headlands, especially on migration in autumn. |
|
Chester Racecourse hosts several flat race meetings from the spring to the autumn. |
|
In the autumn of 2000 large swathes of the town were underwater, notably Frankwell, which flooded three times in six weeks. |
|
Most species are dormant from summer to late winter, flowering in the spring, though a few species are autumn flowering. |
|
They are normally sold as dry bulbs to be planted in late summer and autumn. |
|
Cranberries are another fruit indigenous to the region, often collected in autumn in huge flooded bogs. |
|
|
Auditions take place throughout the autumn around Wales and at selected centres in England for those studying away from home. |
|
Whitehouse attended the University of Leeds from autumn 1976, where he made friends with Charlie Higson. |
|
As the days shorten in autumn, the birds return to warmer regions where the available food supply varies little with the season. |
|
Female chaffinches Fringilla coelebs in Eastern Fennoscandia migrate earlier in the autumn than males do. |
|
More common species, such as the European honey buzzard Pernis apivorus, can be counted in hundreds of thousands in autumn. |
|
Some researchers have suggested that the whales migrate into Hawaiian waters primarily in the autumn and winter. |
|
In the autumn of 2017 filming began in Port Sunlight and Thornton Hough for a new biopic about the author Tolkien starring Nicholas Hoult. |
|
In the autumn of 1882, a central station providing public power was built in Godalming, England. |
|
In the autumn of 1807, Napoleon moved French troops through Spain to invade Portugal. |
|
Fogs occur during summer and early autumn, and furious gales may be expected four or five times in the year. |
|
North Ronaldsay is well known as one of the best birdwatching sites in the country during the spring and autumn migration periods. |
|
But the condition in autumn is contrast that it nearly stop growth while its leaves become senescence. |
|
During autumn, sprat tend to have a diet high in Temora longicornis and Bosmina maritime. |
|
In both autumn and winter, there has been a tendency for sprat to avoid eating Acartia spp. |
|
One of the most spectacular sights of the park is the autumn migration of cranes. |
|
The ships would be tarred in the autumn and then left in a boathouse over the winter to allow time for the tar to dry. |
|
Precipitation is distributed throughout the year, with a maximum in autumn and winter. |
|
In the autumn of 1467, Warwick withdrew from the court to his Yorkshire estates. |
|
Rain is fairly evenly distributed throughout the year, with autumn and winter the wetter seasons. |
|
Fruits, including berries, become increasingly important during summer and early autumn. |
|
|
Roots and bulbs become critical in autumn for some inland bear populations if fruit crops are poor. |
|
They begin to leave the nest after 12 weeks, with autumn born young often wintering with their mother. |
|
For temperate living bats, mating takes place in late summer and early autumn. |
|
Their weights vary seasonally, growing from spring to autumn and reaching a peak just before the winter. |
|
Badgers dig and collect bedding throughout the year, particularly in autumn and spring. |
|
The males of many subspecies also grow a short neck mane during the autumn. |
|
During the autumn, all red deer subspecies grow thicker coats of hair, which helps to insulate them during the winter. |
|
Females in their second autumn can produce one or very rarely two offspring per year. |
|
The polygamous roe deer males clash over territory in early summer and mate in early autumn. |
|
Most of the underfur and some of the guard hairs are shed in the spring and grow back in the autumn period. |
|
By autumn, the pups are mature enough to accompany adults on hunts for large prey. |
|
It is resident in much of its range, but some populations from the more northern parts migrate southwards in autumn. |
|
Some nest building occurs throughout the year, especially after moult in autumn. |
|
Forest species flock only in autumn and winter, though individuals tolerate each other when they meet. |
|
Snake soup of Cantonese cuisine is consumed by local people in autumn, to warm up their body. |
|
Females breed once every two or three years, with litters usually being born in late summer to early autumn in the Northern Hemisphere. |
|
Matings have also been observed in June and even early October, but it is not known if the autumn matings result in any young. |
|
The fruit of the beech tree is known as beechnuts or mast and is found in small burrs that drop from the tree in autumn. |
|
Cut off in the autumn the branches can be a valuable winter supply for domestic animals. |
|
The fruit matures in late summer or autumn, and cultivars exist with a wide range of sizes. |
|
|
Winter apples, picked in late autumn and stored just above freezing, have been an important food in Asia and Europe for millennia. |
|
The tree tends to grow out leaves earlier than most maples and holds its leaves somewhat longer in autumn. |
|
Common gorse flowers a little in late autumn and through the winter, coming into flower most strongly in spring. |
|
Many birds, such as the common blackbird, and some mammals will feed on the nutritious fruits in autumn. |
|
The cycle begins during late summer and autumn months with the storage of glycogen energy reserves. |
|
On a seasonal basis, it migrates southwards in spring and northwards in autumn. |
|
Some broads have navigation restrictions imposed on them in autumn and winter. |
|
He met with the King but was unable to persuade him to grant him their mother's estates, and travelled back to Normandy in the autumn. |
|
It is autumn and Father John Paul sets out on the arduous annual pilgrimage to Barra's highest point to polish up the island's iconic statue. |
|
In spite of this, the plans continued to progress and by autumn the French were poised to launch their invasion. |
|
In the autumn of 1899, the first demonstrations in the United States took place. |
|
In the autumn of 1964, the programme was authorised by Conservative Aviation Minister Julian Amery. |
|
In colder climates, cloves are planted in the autumn, about six weeks before the soil freezes, and harvested in late spring or early summer. |
|
Many coastal towns are also popular retirement hotspots where older people take short breaks in the autumn months. |
|
Monthly rainfall tends to be highest in autumn and early winter and lowest in the summer months, with July often being the driest month. |
|
He was assigned to consolidate the new province of Germania in the autumn of that year. |
|
In autumn 1922, Austria was granted an international loan supervised by the League of Nations. |
|
Adrian sent ambassadors to Charlemagne in autumn requesting he enforce the policies of his father, Pepin. |
|
Last autumn a gentleman who is well acquainted with plate marks saw this plate, and informed the owner that it was spurious. |
|
That year, in autumn, Widukind returned and led a revolt that resulted in many assaults on the church. |
|
|
In the autumn of 1405, the treasure fleet had assembled at Nanjing and was ready to depart from the city. |
|
The return journey was set during the late summer and early autumn, because favorable monsoon winds would be present during this period. |
|
In the autumn of 1381, a Ming army invaded and conquered Yunnan, which was then ruled by the Mongol prince Basalawarmi, Prince of Liang. |
|
In the autumn 1244, Yisaur concentrated the Mongol forces in the upper Tigris valley where they subjugated the Kurdish province of Akhlat. |
|
On his way to Tver, Nikitin died not far from Smolensk in the autumn of that year. |
|
The heaviest precipitation occurs during the autumn months, although more frequent rainy spells occur in winter. |
|
Richards wanted to tour in summer or autumn of 1980 to promote the new album. |
|
Millions of migratory birds pass through the Persian Gulf region in the winter and autumn months. |
|
One globally endangered species, Chlamydotis undulata, is a regular migrant in the autumn. |
|
In Australia, because of its location in the southern hemisphere, Easter takes place in autumn. |
|
The expedition reached as far north as the Russian River before autumn storms forced them to turn back. |
|
In autumn of 1623 Pyanda's party reached the upper Angara and still had some time to build new boats, since Angara usually freezes rather late. |
|
The city is often threatened by flood tides pushing in from the Adriatic between autumn and early spring. |
|
The four seasons in Quebec are spring, summer, autumn and winter, with conditions differing by region. |
|
By autumn of 1835 Locke had become chief engineer for the whole of the line. |
|
The variation of timing and duration in autumn was more variable than in spring. |
|
Another annual music festival, originating in 2005, is Fleetwoodstock, named after the famous New York Woodstock Festival and held in the autumn. |
|
Much of the period, from late 1840 to autumn 1842, Ruskin spent abroad with his parents, principally in Italy. |
|
In autumn 2012, it was reported that Thompson would write more Peter Rabbit books. |
|
As autumn approached, Germany found success in both Portuguese Africa, and against Portuguese vessels, sinking multiple ships. |
|
|
They were cutting aftermath on all sides, which gave the neighbourhood, this gusty autumn morning, an untimely smell of hay. |
|
The autumn of life is also a matter of saying farewell, but the strange thing is that I do not feel it is autumn. |
|
She has beauty still, and if it be not in its heyday, it is not yet in its autumn. |
|
About autumn bate the earth from about the roots of olives, and lay them bare. |
|
The herdsman left last autumn, and by his leaving the dates of service were lost, and the bullings of only a few cows could be given. |
|
The flies, lethargic with the autumn, were beginning to buzz into the room. |
|
I pictured to myself some grizzled, apple-cheeked, country schoolmaster fluting in his bit of garden in the clear autumn sunshine. |
|
The lakes, the gardens, the chinars golden in autumn, the Himalayas all around. |
|
I cannot tell you how my heart expands and exultates within the opening glory of this autumn day. |
|
The daffodils I planted in the autumn are marching their way along the path, strident trumpets fanfaring the first warmish day of the year. |
|
These autumn flowers were in full bloom, fanfaring in the cool autumn wind. |
|
Large outdoor music festivals in the summer and autumn are popular, such as Glastonbury, V Festival, and the Reading and Leeds Festivals. |
|
The hayward at the same place had an acre of the lord's corn in autumn, always in a certain part of the field. |
|
Honey fungus is most obvious when, in autumn, clumps of honey-coloured, pale-stemmed toadstools appear at the base of a tree. |
|
The west tends to be wetter on average and prone to Atlantic storms, especially in the late autumn and winter months. |
|
English Heritage does, however, permit access during the summer and winter solstice, and the spring and autumn equinox. |
|
Thereafter, humectation of soil was recorded in the autumn, following rains. |
|
Indeed, the Viking army did withdraw from Reading in the autumn of 871 to take up winter quarters in Mercian London. |
|
In the autumn of that same year, two rival claimants to the throne led invasions of England in short succession. |
|
In the autumn they joined with the Strathclyde Britons under Owain to invade England. |
|
|
Although William returned to York and built another castle, Edgar remained free, and in the autumn he joined up with King Sweyn of Denmark. |
|
William departed Normandy in July 1080, and in the autumn William's son Robert was sent on a campaign against the Scots. |
|
Margaret, by now seven years of age, sailed from Norway for Scotland in the autumn of 1290, but fell ill on the way and died in Orkney. |
|
By autumn 1347, the plague reached Alexandria in Egypt, probably through the port's trade with Constantinople, and ports on the Black Sea. |
|
By autumn, the plague had reached London, and by summer 1349 it covered the entire country, before dying down by December. |
|
London was reached in the autumn of 1348, before most of the surrounding countryside. |
|
In the autumn of that year, Henry went on royal progress in the Midlands, where the king and queen were popular. |
|
In the autumn of 1536 there was a great muster, reckoned at up to 40,000 in number, at Horncastle in Lincolnshire. |
|
The Queen's health remained fair until the autumn of 1602, when a series of deaths among her friends plunged her into a severe depression. |
|
The Globe opened in autumn 1599, with Julius Caesar one of the first plays staged. |
|
In autumn 1789, legislation abolished monastic vows and on 13 February 1790 all religious orders were dissolved. |
|
The origins of Chartism in Wales can be traced to the foundation in the autumn of 1836 of Carmarthen Working Men's Association. |
|
By early autumn men were being drilled and armed in south Wales, and also in the West Riding. |
|
The following autumn, he passed the entrance exam for the University of Oxford, and was offered an exhibition at Brasenose College. |
|
Callaghan had been widely expected to call a general election in the autumn of 1978 when most opinion polls showed Labour to have a narrow lead. |
|
There are certain harsh, knife-coloured mornings in springtime that are more plangently evocative than any leaf-blown autumn day. |
|
The Green Party of England and Wales holds a spring and an autumn conference every year. |
|
Most of the rainfall in autumn and winter is caused by the Atlantic depressions, which is when they are most active. |
|
As a result, the highest rainfall can be expected in autumn and lowest in spring. |
|
It is usually warm most of the year with no pronounced rainy season, but slightly more rain in autumn and spring. |
|
|
By the autumn of 2005, the convertible version of the successful Continental GT, the Continental GTC, was also presented. |
|
Most of the road will open to traffic in autumn 2016 with the remaining section connecting to junction 11a when it opens. |
|
In 2014 a new, 9000 space car park located underneath the approach to 23R was constructed, the first area of the site opened in the autumn. |
|
Each autumn, all exposed surfaces were covered and lagged against frost damage. |
|
Many were painted elsewhere in Perthshire, near Dunkeld and Birnam, where Millais rented grand houses each autumn to hunt and fish. |
|
After completing studies there, he was admitted to Christ Church, Oxford, in the autumn of 1652 at the age of twenty. |
|
In the autumn of 1735, Johnson opened Edial Hall School as a private academy at Edial, near Lichfield. |
|
The following autumn he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he met and formed a close friendship with the younger John Edleston. |
|
That autumn, Percy Shelley often lived away from home in London to evade creditors. |
|
In the autumn both girls were sent home when they caught typhus and Jane nearly died. |
|
In the autumn of 1908 the newly qualified Lawrence left his childhood home for London. |
|
His illness caused him to miss the autumn term at Cambridge, though his health gradually began improving in 1962 and he returned that April. |
|
Pigs, which were kept by most households in the past, were able to be fattened in autumn on acorns in the extensive oak woods. |
|
Formal bids were to be submitted by 16 February 2015, with the host to be selected that autumn. |
|
Whales frequently pass very close to Greenlandic shores in the late summer and early autumn. |
|
The most temperate seasons are spring, which can be changeable, and autumn, which is generally sunny and dry. |
|
In the autumn of 1969, the Irish Rugby Football Union appointed a coach for the national team for the first time, the role went to Ronnie Dawson. |
|
The area has a large student population and hosts the annual Belfast Festival at Queen's each autumn. |
|
The new leader would be in place before the autumn conference set to begin on 2 October. |
|
In the First World War, German plans to capture Paris quickly in autumn 1914 failed, and the war on the Western Front became a stalemate. |
|
|
Large outdoor music festivals in the summer and autumn are popular, such as Glastonbury, V Festival, Reading and Leeds Festivals. |
|
Vigorous Atlantic depressions, also known as European windstorms, are a common feature of the autumn and winter in Scotland. |
|
During early autumn there can be some settled periods of weather and it can feel pleasant with mild temperatures and some sunny days. |
|
Every autumn, Swansea hosts a Festival of Music and the Arts, when international orchestras and soloists visit the Brangwyn Hall. |
|
Iain Gray announced his intention to resign as leader of the Labour group of MSPs that autumn. |
|
From 1993, the Budget was in spring, preceded by an annual autumn statement. |
|
Spring and autumn are unpredictable and can range from chilly to warm, although they are usually mild with low humidity. |
|
In autumn 1804 George became a brakesman at the West Moor Pit and the family moved to two rooms in a cottage at Killingworth. |
|
Over the course of a year, the whole Torah is read, with the cycle starting over in the autumn, on Simchat Torah. |
|
Methodism was brought to China in the autumn of 1847 by the Methodist Episcopal Church. |
|
Each region has a Regional Committee, which generally meets once a year, normally in the autumn. |
|
The first months of the marriage were overshadowed by a lack of money, and by Gardner's poor health, which persisted into the autumn. |
|
Under a cloud of his affair, Hughes and Plath separated in the autumn of 1962 and she set up life in a new flat with the children. |
|
That autumn, Clapton released the album Pilgrim, the first record featuring new material for almost a decade. |
|
Spending summer and autumn 1836 in Trier, Marx became more serious about his studies and his life. |
|
By the autumn of 1871, the entire first edition of the German language edition of Capital had been sold out and a second edition was published. |
|
Spring and autumn are cool but snow and frost are not unheard of in either season. |
|
The birds begin to form pairs during the autumn and males become increasingly territorial as winter progresses. |
|
And this autumn, alumni across the nation are beginning a new campaign. |
|
It renders the paths, and the banks of the bayous in that region almost impassable in autumn, until the cattle have trodded it down. |
|
|
The ponderous beast had spent the summer eating tuckahoe roots, the autumn eating acorns and nuts, and was now as heavy as two stout men. |
|
Matured in all the graces, he is like the ripened Chian clusters that await the vintager in the autumn days. |
|
Beeline for A-line THE A-line skirt was one of spring's key pieces, and it'll be sticking around for autumn too. |
|
I remember a holiday of mine being completely ruined one late autumn by our paying attention to the weather report of the local newspaper. |
|
A Both antirrhinums and dianthus will flower well into the autumn and if you trim them lightly they will reflower early next spring. |
|
Ascidia interrupta, though rare during this survey, is abundant in autumn and is reproductive during that time. |
|
In autumn the asparagus ferns are cut to ground level as soon as they turn yellow but not until the second year after planting. |
|
We wandered and fiddled and zithered and tambourined through France till the chills and rains of autumn rendered our vagabondage less merry. |
|
One afternoon we were watching Ingmar Bergman's autumn Sonata. |
|
Take hardwood cuttings in late autumn to propagate shrubs including roses, willows, philadelphus, weigelas and dogwoods. |
|
The eight-year-old Weimaraner used to spend hours licking his paws after just a few minutes outside during autumn and winter. |
|
Nine decades of Disney will be brought to life in the Windy City this autumn. |
|
For tips on potato varieties to use for baking and great autumn jacket potato recipes visit www. |
|
Sutherland Lyall, the AR's diligent web vole, plashes questingly through the autumn mire of cyberspace. |
|
Santa Fe Energy has a PSA in the Salawati Block on Vogelkop peninsula in Irian Jaya extended in the autumn of 1996 for 20 years. |
|
There are a number of allergens in the air during autumn, but the most common by far is ragweed pollen. |
|
Then, if the autumn is mild, Sweetheart may reflower and refruit, Ehlenfeldt says. |
|
I was recently reading an article about autumn fishing in the Ponoi river, which flows through Russia's Kola peninsula. |
|
Don't confuse this delicious crocus with colchicums, often called autumn crocus or naked ladies. |
|
The area is home to one of only a handful of places in West Yorkshire where autumn crocuses flourish and there are some beautiful mature trees. |
|
|
So if you're smart, my advice is DON'T throw open wide your window until the autumn equinox arrives. |
|
Over time the Sun in its autumn equinox reside now in the constellation of Virgo. |
|
This year September 22 is the day of the autumn equinox in the northern hemisphere, when night and day are nearly of the same length. |
|
Rooted cuttings from last summer or autumn should also be repotted, adding some slow-release fertiliser into the compost mix. |
|
Rocket, lamb's lettuce, spinach and the glorious red lolla rossa can all be sown in the next couple of weeks for supplies long into autumn. |
|
Langoustines west coastline can be fished from spring through to autumn, while the lobster season starts at the end of September. |
|
Because of its geographic situation, the city is often reached by cold fronts advancing from Antarctica, especially during autumn and winter, causing frequent weather changes. |
|
Zesty orange blooms will brighten up your interior Orange-coloured flowers are the perfect shade to use for late summer or early autumn arrangements. |
|
By autumn Louis XII was in Italy expelling Lodovico Sforza from Milan. |
|
William continued to be absent from the realm for extended periods during his Nine Years' War with France, leaving each spring and returning to England each autumn. |
|
Other areas throughout the year have a recreational culture that caters to tourism, yet the quieter seasons are spring and autumn when there are fewer visitors. |
|
He then spent the autumn hunting before returning to Aachen on 1 November. |
|
That year, in autumn, Widukind returned and led a new revolt. |
|
In the autumn of 40, Octavian and Antony approved the Treaty of Brundisium, by which Lepidus would remain in Africa, Antony in the East, Octavian in the West. |
|
After 45 days, the calves are able to graze and forage but continue suckling until the following autumn when they become independent from their mothers. |
|
In late autumn or early winter after the rut, male reindeer lose their antlers, growing a new pair the next summer with a larger rack than the previous year. |
|
In May 2016, the Steamship Company acquired the Mali Rose, a Norwegian freight ship that was expected to replace the smaller and older Gry Maritha in the autumn of that year. |
|
Admiral Zheng He's fleet left Nanjing in 1413, probably in the autumn. |
|
Prior to the financial and economic panic in the early autumn of 2008, oil and copper price levels were elevated and the markets were in backwardation. |
|
In the autumn of 1477, he sailed on a Portuguese ship from Galway to Lisbon, where he found his brother Bartolomeo, and they continued trading for the Centurione family. |
|