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They could only find a patch or two of bog rosemary.
Others are close-up shots of individual plants, like bog rosemary or foam flower.
Bog rosemary is at its southernmost limit of distribution.
Water-loving plants, such as bog rosemary and wild iris, are found in wet areas throughout the park.
This is the bog rosemary I have grown in my central New Jersey gardens for two summers.
In the shrub layer were bog rosemary, leatherleaf, blueberry, and huckleberry.
Boggy areas support cranberry, bog rosemary and salmonberry.
Shrubby areas, called heaths include leatherleaf, blueberries, bog rosemary, and cranberries.
Here, peat moss, cottongrasses, bog-bean, cranberries and bog rosemary occur.
The common name "bog rosemary" derives from the superficial resemblance of the leaves to those of rosemary, which is not closely related.
Consider, for example, the bog rosemary (Andromeda polifolia) cultivar Blue Ice.
Bog rosemary (Andromeda polifolia), a small flowering shrub, can be found in central Wales.
Common flowering plants in the north include bog rosemary, yellow poppy, Pedicularis, and Pyrola.
Bog Rosemary (Andromeda polifolia)
Bog rosemary contains grayanotoxin, which when ingested lowers blood pressure, and may cause respiratory problems, dizziness, vomiting, or diarrhoea.
Slivers of islandlike landforms made up of sphagnum, sedges and shrubs like bog rosemary seemed to bob ethereally in the water.
Small remnants of raised mire vegetation including Sphagnum Moss, Bog Rosemary and Royal Fern.
Andromeda polifolia, common name bog rosemary, is a species of flowering plant native to northern parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
Stunted black spruce, tamarack, bog rosemary, blueberry, and cottongrass are some of the unusual species that have adapted to the acidic waters of the bog.
The sprigs of andromeda portifolia, or bog rosemary, remind us of the name place, Mointech Milic.
Plants include cotton sedge, bog moss and sphagnum, great hairy willowherb, water figwort, flag iris, cross-leaved heath, bog rosemary, cranberry and sundew; alder trees and willow predominate.
Surrounded by the government buildings and parking lots of downtown Brooklyn is a verdant block where window boxes trail asparagus fern, and slender stalks of bamboo grow from barrels topped by a flowering bog rosemary.
Siskiyou Rare Plant Nursery, in Medford, Ore., which specializes in alpine and rock garden plants, sells everything from bog rosemary to a hardy daisy from South Africa (541-772-6846; catalog, $3).
Typical plants of these mosses are Cottongrasses, Ling Heather, Bell Heather, Cranberry, Blaeberry, Bog Rosemary, Sundews, Deer Grass, Crowberry, etc.
She writes well, sucking on words like they're candy - "Pink buds of bog rosemary, gaping mouths of sundew"; "Midges, mayflies, blackflies, bees" - though you may tire now and then of her choice of candy and all the sucking sounds.
Bog-rosemary (Andromeda polifolia) is a relict of the ice age.
The larvae feed on Cranberry and Andromeda polifolia.
Consider, for example, the bog rosemary (Andromeda polifolia) cultivar Blue Ice.
Bog rosemary (Andromeda polifolia), a small flowering shrub, can be found in central Wales.
Andromeda polifolia var.
Bog Rosemary (Andromeda polifolia)
Andromeda polifolia, common name bog rosemary, is a species of flowering plant native to northern parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
The larvae mainly feed on Rhododendron and Andromeda polifolia, but have also been recorded on apple, blueberry and Red Oak.
In the park four 'heath species' are rather common: Calluna vulgaris, Erica tetralix Empetrum nigrum and Andromeda polifolia.
Characteristic species of the peat bogs include Scheuchzeria palustris, Eriophorum (cotton-grass), sundew, cloudberry, cranberry species, and Andromeda polifolia (bog-rosemary).
The larvae feed on Betula nana, Myrica gale, Calluna vulgaris, Vaccinium uliginosum, Andromeda polifolia and Ledum palustre.
The larvae feed on various herbaceous plants, including Potentilla, Thymus, Andromeda polifolia and possibly Empetrum nigrum, Rubus chamaemorus and Vaccinium uliginosum.
The larvae feed on the leaves of various plants, including Vaccinium myrtillus, Vaccinium uliginosum, Betula, Calluna vulgaris, Andromeda polifolia and Urtica.