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They gave themselves up to the spell and fell fast asleep at the foot of the great grey willow.
Trees around the lake include Black Alder and Grey Willow.
Salix atrocinerea, commonly called grey willow, is a species of willow.
Fear no grey willow!'
Bilberry, Alder and Grey Willow grow throughout the reserve.
Grey willow may refer to:
There is an area of wet woodland incorporating Ash, Alder, English oak and grey willow trees.
Grey Willow (Salix cinerea)
Where Grey Willow, Goat Willow.
Salix cinerea (grey willow; also occasionally grey sallow) is a species of willow native to Europe and western Asia.
The small area of scrub on the site is dominated by Grey Willow and Crack Willow and supports a large number of typical wetland species.
Among surrounding trees and bushes can be found Black Alder, Buckthorn, Grey Willow, and Bay Willow.
Two constant species are found in this community, Grey Willow (Salix cinerea) and Common Marsh-bedstraw (Galium palustre).
The grey willow distribution is mostly Atlantic from Western Europe and North Africa to some Mediterranean islands, and in North Africa.
On the periphery is a strip of carr which is dominated by Grey Willow and Alder Buckthorn bushes as well as Downy Birch.
Part of the site is covered by Wild Cherry, Pendunculate Oak, Ash, Dogwood, Hawthorn, Grey Willow and Dog-rose.
The grey willow lives in freshly disturbed land, with preference for acidic soil, but this is a very hardy species and is even found on beaches near the sea and on islands.
The former Siersmeer and Heerenmeeder Meer in the southern part of the nature reserve have completely silted up and now form a large expanse of sedge with transitions to grey willow bushes.
Conservation measures taken to maintain or improve biodiversity include controlling weeds, particularly grey willow, aquatic grasses, yellow flag iris, alligator weed and gorse, and mammalian pests, including mustelids, rodents, cats and possum.
Along the shores grow trees such as Ash, Elm, Hybrid Crack Willow, Oak, Aspen, Bird Cherry, Black Alder, Bay Willow, Grey Willow, and Goat Willow.
Characteristic species are Downy Birch, Black Alder, Grey Willow, Crack Willow, Broad Buckler Fern, Narrow Buckler Fern and Remote Sedge.
It is the same with the various damselflies in their clay and gravel streams, the watermill with its grey willows and grey wagtails, and the crowfoot crowning the ford and the curve in ridge and furrow.
Stands on more fertile soils and in more favorable locations are occasionally dominated by Norway maple, black alder, grey alder, common aspen, English oak, grey willow, dark-leaved willow, tea-leaved willow, small-leaved lime or European white elm.
Along the shores are Grey Willow, Goat Willow, Aspen, Black Alder, Bog-myrtle, Tall Bog-sedge, Common Sedge, Bottle Sedge, Slender Sedge, Cranberry, and Round-leaved Sundew.
The canopy is much shorter than that of Coed Kensington, Coed Waunpiod east and the sycamore woods as it is dominated by alder and hazel with frequent examples of ash, holly, grey willow and a few oak and birch.
Commons trees found around the lake include Black Alder and Grey Sallow.
The area of blown sand is dominated by marram grass (Ammophila arenaria) which helps to stabilise the dunes and shelter a relatively rich flora of non-maritime plants such as a stunted grey sallow (Salix cinerea).