I choose seared kangaroo served on wattle seed bread with a wild tomato chutney and warrigal greens. |
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Yes, they are indeed proper hand-made wattle hurdles, thank you for asking. |
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These are decorated with the floral emblems of Australia and Greece, the wattle and the olive. |
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The day was used to raise funds for the war effort and many trees were denuded in order to supply the many sprigs of wattle sold on that day. |
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The fourth side is screened by lightweight wattle wall that gently diffuses the harsh light. |
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These roundhouses were generally fashioned from double-walled, woven wicker or from posts and wattle. |
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The school's year 4 students planted 64 native trees, including river red gums, wattle and melaleuca, to attract wildlife to the school. |
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Here the Seri have built both Mexican-style jacales of wattle and daub, and small wood-frame structures. |
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Door posts, a threshold beam and a section of wattle wall are clearly visible. |
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You can experience karees, lead wood and buffalo-thorn trees with weeping wattle coming out with its yellow flowers in spring. |
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They were replaced by shanties and shacks built of nothing more than clapboard or wattle and daub with dark and threatening alleyways between. |
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The flat-roofed Berber homes, some of which can be rented for short stays, are built with chestnut tree joists and wattle and daub. |
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You can even tell when a turkey isn't feeling well by looking at their caruncle or wattle because they become very pale and colorless. |
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On the ridges and slopes white box and red stringy bark dominate in association with kurrajong and hickory wattle. |
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The fern-leaved grevillea or honey wattle, Grevillea pteridifolia, is a slender tree with fine silvery leaves and brilliant orange flowers. |
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Here is the second cluster of huts, wattle fences enclosing neat crofts of fowl houses and kitchen-gardens blown with harvest. |
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Woven wattle fences hedge the crofts, enclosing each family's stock of goats and fowl. |
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Between 18 and 24 guests live close to nature on a twin-shared basis in wattle huts under scented tropical trees. |
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Although badly damaged in recent years, evidence of wattle houses and a livestock pen were discovered. |
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Yet from wattle to neoprene, the history of architecture is also the history of material invention. |
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Dublin's property boundaries were set from the earliest dense occupation, and wattle fences were replicated numerous times in the same positions. |
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Jeff showed the twins how to weave the twig wattle fence that borders the deck. |
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The walls of the pit would be lined with wooden planks or wattle, and the floor could also be planked. |
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The plants were being protected from the gales by old wattle fencing being put alongside the flower beds. |
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The experts reckon the house originally has a thatched or cut wood roof supported by a wattle wall and timber posts. |
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The two Greens Senators wore a sprig of wattle over a postcard picture of the two Australian citizens interned in Guantanamo Bay. |
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Common sites of injection in birds include the wing web, wattle, dewlap, and interdigitary skin. |
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Most have returned to their villages, but many have found that their wattle and daub huts have been damaged or washed away altogether. |
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Workers have uncovered a wattle and daub partition wall in the east wing and a centuries-old figurine. |
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Inside, there is a 300-year-old wattle and daub fireplace, one of only three or four that still survive in Ireland. |
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She turned and disappeared into the gap between two wattle and daub buildings, their second stories overhanging the alley. |
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No peasant wattle and daub homes exist anymore as they were so crudely made. |
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The two-story wattle and daub structure built in the Tudor style had sadly deteriorated. |
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In the dry, treeless areas, houses are constructed of rock or wattle and daub with mud or lime exteriors. |
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I could become a cartographer or a world expert on Thomas Edison or learn how to make wattle and daub huts. |
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Huts are either circular or oblong with wattle walls, plastered outside and inside with mud, and roofed with thatch. |
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The wattle will turn blue at the base, graduating into a deep rose pink that hangs down like a pendant. |
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Two charcoal burning furnaces had been erected to turn wattle wood into charcoal. |
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According to a reporter, the villagers ignored government warnings and broke into the hostel building, where they feel somewhat safer than in their wattle and daub huts. |
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In the next 12 months alone, there is a need for almost 200 lime plasterers, around 140 wattle and daub craftspeople, over 100 glaziers and almost 60 cob builders. |
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It is a major example of an architectural achievement in organic materials, principally wood, thatch, reed, wattle and daub. |
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Light Earth is most closely linked to wattle and daub as it relies on the frame for stability and is only an infill material. |
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Our house also seemed a little swallowed by wattle at times. |
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Among the important condensed tannins are the extracts from the wood or bark of quebracho, mangrove, and wattle. |
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Fragments of wattle and daub used in the house construction plus a trackway lined with tree trunks leading to the entrance have also been uncovered. |
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It is sheltered effectively by blue gums and golden wattle broken by a palm tree and a peppercorn and it overlooks an olive grove, which yields a steady supply of virgin oil. |
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Sally wattle, ironwood and beefwood dominate the very sparse canopy. |
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Church buildings were usually erected by members using wattle and daub construction, and financial contributions for maintenance were requested in every Sunday service. |
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Flowers were widely used in design, particularly from the 1880s, when motifs based on the waratah, wattle, bottlebrush, and eucalyptus were popular. |
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The timbers were the uprights of wattle fences, the complex containing up to 100,000 square feet or 30,500 square metres of fencing, some of which still survives. |
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Traditional wattle and daub construction is cheaper and more functional, but cement and glass are seen as a step up. |
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A dull hen with a pale, rough wattle and comb can be picked out easily and examined further. |
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Fragments of wattle and daub used in the house construction plus a trackway lined with treetrunks leading to the entrance have also been uncovered. |
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Large numbers of ashpits containing domestic refuse as well as a few wattle and daub houses have been unearthed. |
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The excavations at Waterstone's uncovered wattle fencing and rubbish pits superbly preserved because of the water-logged conditions under the building. |
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They were found on what was once the Thames foreshore, and would have been stored underwater in a wattle enclosure to stop the wood drying out and splitting. |
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But it was a skill that was largely lost as we moved from caves through wattle and daub to pebbledash and crazy paving. |
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Round about are borrow pits for taking clay to make wattle and daub walls. |
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Wake to clean mountain air and the happy warble of native birds such as karrowong and yellow throated wattle. |
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Wheat farmers, grape growers, hawkers, wattle growers, charcoal burners, timber cutters and teamsters all needed good roads for their businesses to operate successfully. |
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In the foreground are burrawangs and beautiful native wattle in flower. |
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And instead of being made from steel or aluminium it's wattle and daub. |
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They are notable for their unique, umbrella-like crest and for the pendant suspended from the throat, which is an inflatable wattle. |
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Most of the homes of poor rural people are made of local materials, with floors of packed earth, walls of adobe or wattle and daub, and roofs of clay tiles or thatch. |
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And sure enough, they turned a corner and the constable quickly ushered Malcolm towards a small but neat looking two-storey wattle and daub house. |
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There's a tableau, all wattle and daub, of a home in the 10th century after the Vikings had landed on the beach and built a fort called Skardaborg. |
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Small houses made of wattle and daub and wood surrounded the outskirts of the village, while the few houses made of stone were in the market square. |
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The wattle may be made as loose panels, slotted between timber framing to make infill panels, or made in place to form the whole of a wall. |
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Suddenly, everyone was talking about their wattle. |
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Named after the daughter of an early Katoomba businessman, this cool, moist rainforest is home to coachwood, black wattle, cedar wattle, king fern and many rarer shrubs and ferns. |
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The floral emblems are those of the countries that participated in the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan: maple leaves for Canada, oak leaves for Britain, wattle for Australia, and ferns for New Zealand. |
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It has two rooms, and is made of clay packed on top of timber and wattle. |
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This is attributed to the widespread cultivation of Eucalyptus and black wattle, and the less labour-intensive harvesting from these cultivated tree species. |
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Instead, surprisingly good results can be obtained by covering the slime surface with IZOLING mats with inserted root cuttings of hemp wattle and plain reed. |
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The space between the posts was filled in with wattle and daub, or occasionally, planks. |
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The frame was usually filled with wattle and daub but occasionally with brick. |
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It is then applied to the wattle and allowed to dry, and often then whitewashed to increase its resistance to rain. |
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There are suggestions that construction techniques such as lath and plaster and even cob may have evolved from wattle and daub. |
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Fragments from prehistoric wattle and daub buildings have been found in Africa, Europe, Mesoamerica and North America. |
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The exact date of the building is not known, but remains of timber framing with wattle and daub indicate that the building is very old. |
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Dublin was founded by the Vikings at the point where they were able to ford the River Liffey with the first wattle bridge up from the estuary. |
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Herbs such as river mint, wattle and eucalyptus were used for coughs, diarrhea, fever and headaches. |
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In others, they were built of timber, wattle and daub, or a mix of materials. |
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The Cherokee lived in wattle and daub houses made with wood and clay, roofed with wood or thatched grass. |
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In southern England, hazel was particularly important for coppicing, the branches being used for wattle and daub in buildings, for example. |
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The year three and four students assembled the house by working in teams to make wattle and daub panels. |
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The items, ranging from pottery and loom weights to wattle and daub from buildings, were unearthed by archaeologist Brian Hope-Taylor. |
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The dining room echoes the timbers of the house and features traditional wattle and daub construction. |
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The roundhouse, measuring 20ft in diameter and 14ft high, is being hand-made with wattle and daub walls, beams and a thatched roof. |
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The Centre offers many special activity days when you can learn how to make a wattle and daub wall or listen, as our ancestors did, to an ancient story by a fire in a roundhouse. |
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They were built with wooden posts and walls of wattle and daub. |
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In Europe, long houses built from wattle and daub were constructed. |
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The wattle and daub technique was used already in the Neolithic period. |
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The old monk who was the night-janitor of the monastery now appeared bearing in his hand a dark-lantern and a wattle basket with some fruit and a bowl of rice. |
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The head is bottle green with a small crest and distinctive red wattle. |
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Now a shopping precinct this building dates back to the 15th century with examples of wattle and daub just inside the building on the right hand side. |
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The origin of the term wattle describing a group of acacias in Australia, is derived from the common use of acacias as wattle in early Australian European settlements. |
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There's an old grammar school, a stunning 13th-century church and the Tudor Merchant's House which boasts 500-year-old timbers, exposed wattle and daub. |
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