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There are some uncommon species, such as sneezewort and pignut.
They are the roots of the pignut plant and can grow as big as golf balls.
Grass chalkland is a habitat under threat, and the site has a number of rare plant species, including great pignut.
Pignut grows here, providing food for the chimney sweeper moth.
Plants include knotted hedge-parsley, common poppy and great pignut.
Pignut Mountain is separated from the main Blue Ridge by a low gap.
Chimney sweeper moths are abundant, due to the presence of their food plant, pignut.
Pignut hickory is also found in Canada in southern Ontario.
Hognut or pignut can mean any of a number of unrelated plants:
The range of pignut hickory covers nearly all of eastern United States (11).
Pignut hickory is difficult to reproduce from cuttings.
Chan, the plant Hyptis suaveolens, a relative of mint also known as "pignut"
Rare species include sycamore, sassafras and pignut hickory.
The larva feed mainly on pignut.
In the wild larder of Britain the pignut, which has a taste somewhere between coconut and parsnip, is a sweet treat.
Pignut hickory is easily damaged by fire, which causes stem degrade or loss of volume, or both.
Pignut Mountain is entirely undeveloped.
A large Pignut Hickory and Black Walnut trees shade the garage.
Other species of tree include black oak, black walnut, pignut hickory, sugar maples, and tulip trees.
The Woodland From the birch tree end, the white frothy wild pignut looks good in the grass with bluebells.
It has a good diversity of wild flowers, including great burnet and pignut, both characteristic of unimproved grassland.
An errant pottle-deep pignut.
Pignut hickory tends to develop a pronounced taproot with few laterals and is rated as windfirm (21).
Pignut Mountain is a mountain in Rappahannock County, Virginia.
Also flowering in the late spring are common twayblade, adder's-tongue, cowslip, bluebell, and pignut.
The plant has many English names (many of them shared with Bunium bulbocastanum, a related plant with similar appearance and uses) variously including kippernut, cipernut, arnut, jarnut, hawknut, earth chestnut, groundnut, and earthnut.
However, Conopodium majus is commonly called pignut, groundnut etc. and would be in season in May.
Pignut (Conopodium majus)
The meadows are particularly rich in pignut (Conopodium majus), a relative of parsley, which formed a breaktime snack for children in former times.
Additionally, flora typical of relatively basepoor clay soils, such as pignut Conopodium majus, betony Betonica officinalis, heath bedstraw Galium saxatile, tormentil Potentilla erecta, devil's-bit scabious Succisa pratensis, and mat grass Nardus stricta, are present.