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Some gardeners may know it by its other common name, old man's beard.
The old man's beard was shining silver in the moonlight.
The old man's beard was long and white.
The tears trickled down on the old man's beard.
More kisses, the momentary abrasion of the old man's beard.
Blood flecked the iron grey of the old man's beard and he smiled at the new Earl.
Old man's beard may refer to the following species:
The old man's beard bristled, his bushy eyebrows stuck out in all directions.
Releasing the old man's beard, he drew his sword and put the edge to the druid's throat.
The old man's beard shot up.
The old man's beard was a mass of silky grey hair and the willow herb underneath it white like goose down.
Mr. Crolley brushes a pale green moss, which he calls old man's beard.
Soon they viewed the fringe tree (also known as "old man's beard," for its wispy hanging flowers).
Then the youth seized the axe, split the anvil with one blow, and in it caught the old man's beard.
She would have gone out and found old man's beard and rosehips in a hedgerow, too."
The youth seized the axe, cleft the anvil open, and jammed in the old man's beard.
A slow, red-brown flush spread up his thin cheeks beneath the close-clipped old man's beard.
Old man's beard (Usnea barbata) hanging from branches adds to the beauty of the forests.
From the trees overhead hang festoons of a vine called Old Man's Beard.
Distribution and potential range of old man's beard, Clematis vitalba, in New Zealand.
There were chambers and platforms and instruments stuck as if at random into the tangle, like food fragments in an old man's beard.
As Regan plucks the old man's beard, we hear her echo a former accusation: "So white, and such a traitor!"
"It's bad, very bad," Wangdi continued, as he swept back some old man's beard dripping from a cypress like dreadlocks.
The old man's beard had grown longer, a coarse gray beard hanging between his knees, hiding the nakedness of a wrinkled body.
Often buddleia is associated with another calcium-loving plant, traveller's joy (Clematis vitalba).
Some of this, such as traveller's joy (Clematis vitalba), has extended its range on to the alkaline mortar-rich soils of the urban wasteland.
Clematis vitalba (also known as Old man's beard and Traveller's Joy) is a shrub of the Ranunculaceae family.
In 1949 Forwood gained his first acting role when he starred in Ralph Thomas' Traveller's Joy.
Monkey rope strung from tall trees draped with club moss was given names such as: traveller's joy, lemon capers, climbing saffron, milk rope and David's roots.
Climbing plants in the traditional cottage garden included European honeysuckle (Lonicera periclymenum) and Traveller's Joy (Clematis vitalba).
Clematis brachiata, commonly known as Traveller's Joy, is a hardy, deciduous South African liana belonging to the Ranunculaceae family.
There is a scrub line along the wall boundary which includes Hawthorn, Dog-rose, Bramble, Field Maple, Hazel, Holly and Traveller's Joy.
Traveller's Joy is a 1949 British comedy film directed by Ralph Thomas and starring Googie Withers, John McCallum and Maurice Denham.
She seems happiest in the country with her powerfully romantic interpretations of a Path through the Trees Down a Lane in Winter which she regards as very much a Traveller's Joy.
BBC radio wanted to broadcast more of their popular radio comedy thriller serials, and so they created the pairing "Woolcot and Spencer", characters they used in Double Bedlam (1946) and Traveller's Joy (1947).
Clematis virginiana (also known as Devil's Darning Needles, Devil's Hair, Love Vine, Traveller's Joy, Virgin's Bower, Virginia Virgin's Bower, Wild Hops, and Woodbine; syn.
The pale yellow flowers of the traveller's joy entwined in the hedgerows brought no happiness to David Waterlane stuck behind a convoy of cars on the Midhurst Road which was held up by a huge lorry with a sign saying 'Horses' on the back.
I looked out of the taxi window as the houses dwindled back and the road began to wind between high, banked hedges full of ivy and holly glistening with recent rain, and the red berries of honeysuckle twining through pillow fight drifts of traveller's joy.
Clematis vitalba was used to make rope during the Stone Age in Switzerland.
Often buddleia is associated with another calcium-loving plant, traveller's joy (Clematis vitalba).
A giant Clematis vitalba grows over an archway by the north wing of the house has spread to the perimeter fence and created a wall.
The caterpillars feed on Clematis vitalba and cultivated Clematis species.
Old man's beard (Clematis vitalba) is an invasive plant in New Zealand that has an impact on indigenous biodiversity.
Old man's beard (Clematis vitalba)
Old man's beard (the scientific name is Clematis vitalba) is a fast growing vine that covers and strangles trees and shrubs.
Some of this, such as traveller's joy (Clematis vitalba), has extended its range on to the alkaline mortar-rich soils of the urban wasteland.
Due to its disseminatory reproductive system, vitality, and climbing behavior, Clematis vitalba is an invasive plant in most places, included many in which it is native.
The larvae feed on Ranunculus acris, Anemone nemorosa, Gallium and Clematis vitalba.
Isomers of colneleic and colnelenic acids were isolated from homogenates of leaves of Clematis vitalba (Ranunculaceae).
Climbing plants in the traditional cottage garden included European honeysuckle (Lonicera periclymenum) and Traveller's Joy (Clematis vitalba).
The larvae feed on a wide range of plants, including Vaccinium myrtillus, Clematis vitalba, Rubus idaeus, Erica and Betula species.
The larvae feed on various shrubs and deciduous trees such as oak, alder, birch, Crataegus, bird cherry, Corylus avellana, Rubus, Clematis vitalba and also fallen leaves.
Based on the remaining stumps, over 100 Totara had been felled, while the bush was also been infested with the exotic pest plants Old Mans Beard (Clematis Vitalba) and Wandering Jew (Tradescantia Fluminensis), both detrimental to the forest.
It grows in the margins of forests or unforested areas as woods in regeneration, prickly woodland fringes, with other thorny shrub species (for example Clematis vitalba, Crataegus monogyna, Malus sylvestris, Prunus spinosa, Rubus idaeus, Rubus ulmifolius etc.).
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