It's a well-balanced wine with oodles of ripe raspberry, bramble fruit, spices and vibrant tannins. |
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Frontiers have come in all shapes and historical moments, and childhood has always been shaped by a bramble of racial and ethnic diversity. |
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An initial fruit hit of ripe bramble jam and dark chocolate give way to a well-balanced spicy mouthful of winter berry fruit and ginger. |
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Once, out picking blackberries, he over-reached and fell headlong into the prickly bramble. |
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Good quality planting stock is the key to success in the bramble fruit enterprise. |
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I heard their mad dash through the bramble, the blackberry thorns tearing at their sneakers and shorts. |
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This one makes for easy drinking despite the crushed stinging nettle and bramble flavours. |
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He dips his chin, and just as an expectant gasp ripples through the crowd, Eddie launches himself over the wall into a bramble of wild roses. |
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Eight basic factors must be considered in selecting a site for a bramble planting. |
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Serve with bold winter food and watch its charming, dusky, bramble and blackcurrant fruit take centre stage. |
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To avoid bramble scratches and tick attacks, wear long gear and good shoes. |
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Rare plant life which has perished includes cloudberry, a sub-arctic bramble, which thrives on moorland peat bogs. |
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The ground flora is very rich with herb Paris, wild garlic, sweet woodruff, stone bramble and bird's nest orchid present. |
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One plant we should see more of is Rubus biflorus, the ornamental bramble, whose prickly stems are covered in a white, waxy bloom. |
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Before the gorse, goat willow and bramble were all problems needing a lot of labor to manage. |
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Indians from the Central American highlands trudge for days up dry washes lined with bramble bushes. |
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The RSPCA officer cut the soggy moggy free from a bramble bush after she was found by workmen in the area. |
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We gave no thought to snakes although any one of us could have been bitten at least a dozen times as we sauntered through the bramble. |
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In Scotland, the fruit of the thorny shrub is called a bramble, while in England it is a blackberry. |
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For edge of the woods grow thick scrub where the bramble, along with climbing species, forms a dense and impenetrable plot. |
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Red fruit and a long finish which blends toasted peppercorns with notes of bramble. |
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I cover bramble rows with a fine mesh net, placing stakes with T-shaped crosspieces every 6 feet to keep the mesh from getting entangled with the plants. |
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She screamed, wrenching a sizable twig out of her hair and hurling it at him, after disentangling herself from what must have been the twentieth or so bramble thicket. |
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The going wasn't easy, as they fought their way out of a thick bramble forest the first day, and, during the second day, found themselves entering a wide, expansive plain. |
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The consensus among conservation scientists is for drastic action: shoot the goats, poison the rats, grub out the bramble. |
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As its name suggests, its aroma reminds undergrowth due to the chestnut mixture, the bramble, heather, lime, oak and a slight hint of hazelnut. |
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A low-slung chassis, no more than 15 inches at the shoulder, enables the basset to tunnel through bramble and brush like a four-legged rototiller. |
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They're a lighter, more reserved style, with intriguing aromatic, wild herb and bramble berry notes. |
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A typical English amateur, I could just about pick out a field mushroom and knew how to make bramble jelly. |
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Rubus leucodermis, Framboise blue is a bramble species of the family of Rosaceae. |
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Raspberry is the fruit of the Raspberry bush, a bramble from the mountainous regions of Europe. |
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Briquet Griffon Vendéens are fast, fine-nosed dogs that are prepared to follow their mark into bramble bushes. |
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Petit Basset Griffon Vendeens are brave and enthusiastic hunters that love to work in the bramble and scrub. |
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Of this chapel, there remain only some stones in the middle of a bramble bush. |
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But the area of chaos remains there, just in the centre of the sight that incorporates everything in the bramble. |
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I described how I'd had to climb up a steep and dangerous rock face to a thorny bramble bush on a narrow ledge, from where I could hear the cat meowing. |
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The thicker scrub and thickets of elder, hawthorn and bramble, meanwhile, provide ideal cover for nesting robins, wrens, sparrows, dunnocks, blackbirds and thrushes. |
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But this warbler is usually associated with tangled vegetation near water or with reedbeds containing alders and an undergrowth including bramble, nettle and willowherb. |
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Sneezewort, milkwort and lousewort were not noticed in 1999 but sneezewort had returned in 2000, perhaps due to cattle grazing and winter management, i.e bramble clearance. |
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My mother was stretching up to reach the blackberries within the bramble. |
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The aromas consist of bramble fruit, such as blackberries and raspberries. |
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A heady brew of spiced bramble with herb and chocolate scents serves up a sweet and sour cherry and bramble fruit with drying cocoa-flavoured tannins. |
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Although bramble fruits comprise a small portion of the Ohio fruit basket, many producers are doing an excellent job of raising and managing their brambles. |
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Dog roses, bramble, nettles and thistles provide good for birds such as goldfinch, greenfinch, chaffinches and the occasional rarity such as brambling or bullfinch. |
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The first martagons I ever saw grew in a bramble patch in our old house. |
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Hydro-active activator complex is based upon a high concentration of bramble extract that is formulated with soya liposomes, and other highly effective, vegetal extracts and essences. |
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As soon as the order was given, the dragon lowered his head and took the burning bodies into his mouth with a movement of his huge neck, and throwing them out of sight behind the bramble. |
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You will be able to enjoy the shade and greenery of our riverine forests of alders, birches, ashes, willows, poplars, osier beds, bramble patches, blackthorn shrubs, creepers and other species. |
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The trees and the ferns seemed to progressively disappear only to be repla ced, in the distance, by a local species of dark bramble bushes, with long, sharp thorns that created a very hostile and natural form of barbed wire. |
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I slithered over roots and through a bramble bush and a mulchy pile of rotting leaves. |
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Rifle is a gauge 14 with piston, Damas barrel, stick out of bramble or magnifying glass of drowning, it unfortunately misses an hammer dismounted for an obscure reason. |
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Other sites are sometimes chosen, and these include low trees and bushes, bramble patches, reed beds, heather clumps and cliff ledges. |
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Here is a blackberry bramble, a shock of wineberry plants, a bed of strawberries. |
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Ripening blackberries even now loaded the bramble bushes, but the foul noxiousness of gas shells had made them uneatable. |
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Their bootprints turned to face the thicket of briar and bramble in exactly the same place mine had. |
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The old dog-fox came out of bramble patch, she said suddenly. |
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The Large Mason Bee is Britain's rarest solitary bee and is found only at two sites where it forages nectar from horseshoe vetch, bramble and bugle. |
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The ripe bramble, red cherry and blackcurrant fruit will not be smothered by the meat while its attractive touches of cinnamon, vanilla and pepper all add pleasing complexity. |
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