The site already has a good stock of colourful wild flower species such as ragged robin, great burnet and meadowsweet. |
|
Sand dunes are particularly rich in flowers and are the most beautiful is the burnet rose. |
|
For a more compact plant, consider our native Scotch briar, or burnet rose. |
|
Species present include great burnet, meadowsweet, greater spearwort, tubular water-dropwort and pepper-saxifrage. |
|
There is always room to include Italian and curly parsley, sorrel, salad burnet, mustard, chard, and kale greens. |
|
I use thyme, sage, rosemary, chives, basil, dill, sorrel, salad burnet, chervil, oregano and mint as well as parsley. |
|
The Scot's briar or burnet rose, Rosa pimpinellifolia, is a native and its cultivated hybrids and forms put up no fight in the garden because they actually like it here. |
|
Some of the plants that are typical of ancient chalk grassland include marjoram, wild thyme, salad burnet, rock rose, eyebright and squinancywort. |
|
So why do we neglect common Colonial food plants like burnet, smallage, skirrets, scorzonera, gooseberry and purslane? |
|
This combination of management and heavy, poorly-drained soils favoured characteristic plants such as great burnet, devil's bit scabious, meadow rue and pepper saxifrage. |
|
On his menu you might find scallops with lemon verbena infused oil, Brie flavored with burnet, potato and chive griddle cakes and peach cobbler sweetened with stevia. |
|
Some of our favorites are the long, skinny French radishes, French purslane, arugula, mache, salad burnet, lemon verbena, leeks and, of course, all kinds of tomatoes. |
|
The six-spot burnet moth is brightly coloured and is active by day. |
|
The nature reserve features plants such as knapweed, cowslip, pignut, lady's bedstraw and great burnet. |
|
On top of this, the stem of greater burnet saxifrage is angular and deeply furrowed, whereas burnet saxifrage's stem is cylindrical and almost unfurrowed. |
|
They include field garlic, chives, maiden pink, long-stalked cranesbill, heath pearlwort, common rockrose and burnet rose. |
|
His first prize picture was of a burnet moth on ragwort and his third-placed photograph was of marsh helleborines on the island. |
|
The first of these consisted of two morsels of black sea bass garnished with lemon juice, sea salt, pepper, and a sprig of salad burnet, a green that looks like parsley and tastes like cucumber. |
|
Was the pink monstrosity a damask, burnet, gallica, large-flowered hybrid tea, modern bush or English or species rose, eglantine, cluster-flowered floribunda, or merely a shrub? |
|
He uses charcoal as burnet wood in memory of his dad in the coal mines. |
|
|
Fortunately the menacing molusc did not like the seedlings of some of the desirable wildflowers such as wood cranesbill, rough hawkbit and greater burnet. |
|
There is, bergamot angelica, salad burnet, lemon verbena, sweet bay, sweet cicely, rampion, bistort, the old tried and tested pot marigold, hyssop and southernwood. |
|
A handful of the first Burnet Moths of the year were seen on Lancing Ring meadows and around the dewpond. |
|
This hat was found by Bishop Burnet, when Clerk of the Closet, in the great wardrobe and was given by his son, the Judge, to the Countess. |
|
Burnet sought to reconcile a Cartesian-derived historical account of the origins of the Earth with the creation account of the Mosaic tradition. |
|
Nothing more could add to his notoriety except a deathbed conversion, and the Scottish bishop and historian Gilbert Burnet was to provide it. |
|
Burnet showed his gratitude by founding eight bursarships in his will. |
|
Yorkshire had internal problems which were resolved before the 1959 season in which Yorkshire recovered the title under Ronnie Burnet. |
|
In 1960, Vic Wilson became Yorkshire's first professional captain since Tom Emmett when he succeeded Ronnie Burnet. |
|
Designed by Sir John Burnet, it was completed in 1929 and dedicated on 4 October. |
|
But this Burnet Pimpinella is of a different order, though similarly styled because its leaves are likewise bipennate. |
|
When Burnet was ashore he hastened to William and eagerly enquired what William now intended to do. |
|
Burnet was a bishop chronicling how England became Protestant, and his use of the term is invariably pejorative. |
|
The first British historian to use the term was most likely Gilbert Burnet, in the form 'darker ages' which appears several times in his work during the later 17th century. |
|