Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The horsechestnut has fat buds that are sticky to touch.
The fattest are those of the horsechestnut tree flower.
One of the easiest buds to start with is the fat, easily seen one on the horsechestnut tree.
Horsechestnut is a similar case.
Maple, horsechestnut, cherry, walnut, apple, and oak trees had grown old on the grounds.
Mad horse stands for maple, ash, dogwood, horsechestnut.
Shrubby plants include blackberry, horsechestnut, sumac, and sometimes hawthorn.
Blue spruce, common horsechestnut, European beech and littleleaf linden are among the other non-native species grown.
Prominent among the non-native trees are horsechestnut, Norway maple, silver maple and several species of walnut, including the butternut.
And I note that Miss Cavendish has one of those big, deep navels, the kind that you could keep a horsechestnut in.
Non-native species are commonly represented by Norway maple, silver birch, English oak, blue spruce, common horsechestnut and honey locust.
Aesculus hippocastanum (Horsechestnut)
Two preparations are considered; whole horsechestnut extract (whole HCE) and purified β-aescin.
Sunset in the summer was framed between two horsechestnut trees; in winter one tree obscured it, fretting its unpredictable colors with a system of twigs that never changed.
Todd Lane, the older portion of Carleton Avenue up to the 9A entrance and Horsechestnut are part of the village.
The park is approximately 350m x 250m and has a perimeter of various vegetation, including; Sycamore trees, Willow and Horsechestnut trees.
The buckeye belongs to the same clan as the huge horsechestnut tree with its palmlike foliage, but its shrubby stature and reliable performance give it top rating.
Long-established exotic trees include London plane, horsechestnut, flowering cherry, flowering plum, Norway maple, sycamore maple, Japanese maple, catalpa and tulip tree.
To learn to use a key, and keep on the right track, it is easiest to start with an obvious twig like that of the horsechestnut and graduate slowly to the more complicated twigs for identification.
MediHerb Horsechestnut Complex by Standard Proc... MediHerb LivCo by Standard Process, Inc.
To ease the learning, here's a mnenomic for those plants that are opposite: MAD HORSE: M for maple, A for ash, D for dogwood and Horse, as in horsechestnut.
At lower altitudes (1,700-2,400m) occur nearly pure stands of cedar and blue pine, and moist temperate deciduous forest, represented by horsechestnut, Aesculus indica, walnut Juglans regia, maple, Acer spp.
An American elm in the East Meadow and a London plane tree at East 96th Street, adjacent to the reservoir, are probably originals, he said, as is the majestic horsechestnut near West 102d Street and the superb Osage orange near Drip- rock Arch.
Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The horsechestnut has fat buds that are sticky to touch.
The fattest are those of the horsechestnut tree flower.
One of the easiest buds to start with is the fat, easily seen one on the horsechestnut tree.
Horsechestnut is a similar case.
Maple, horsechestnut, cherry, walnut, apple, and oak trees had grown old on the grounds.
Mad horse stands for maple, ash, dogwood, horsechestnut.
Shrubby plants include blackberry, horsechestnut, sumac, and sometimes hawthorn.
Blue spruce, common horsechestnut, European beech and littleleaf linden are among the other non-native species grown.
Prominent among the non-native trees are horsechestnut, Norway maple, silver maple and several species of walnut, including the butternut.
And I note that Miss Cavendish has one of those big, deep navels, the kind that you could keep a horsechestnut in.
Non-native species are commonly represented by Norway maple, silver birch, English oak, blue spruce, common horsechestnut and honey locust.
Aesculus hippocastanum (Horsechestnut)
Two preparations are considered; whole horsechestnut extract (whole HCE) and purified β-aescin.
Sunset in the summer was framed between two horsechestnut trees; in winter one tree obscured it, fretting its unpredictable colors with a system of twigs that never changed.
Todd Lane, the older portion of Carleton Avenue up to the 9A entrance and Horsechestnut are part of the village.
The park is approximately 350m x 250m and has a perimeter of various vegetation, including; Sycamore trees, Willow and Horsechestnut trees.
The buckeye belongs to the same clan as the huge horsechestnut tree with its palmlike foliage, but its shrubby stature and reliable performance give it top rating.
Long-established exotic trees include London plane, horsechestnut, flowering cherry, flowering plum, Norway maple, sycamore maple, Japanese maple, catalpa and tulip tree.
To learn to use a key, and keep on the right track, it is easiest to start with an obvious twig like that of the horsechestnut and graduate slowly to the more complicated twigs for identification.
MediHerb Horsechestnut Complex by Standard Proc... MediHerb LivCo by Standard Process, Inc.
To ease the learning, here's a mnenomic for those plants that are opposite: MAD HORSE: M for maple, A for ash, D for dogwood and Horse, as in horsechestnut.
At lower altitudes (1,700-2,400m) occur nearly pure stands of cedar and blue pine, and moist temperate deciduous forest, represented by horsechestnut, Aesculus indica, walnut Juglans regia, maple, Acer spp.
An American elm in the East Meadow and a London plane tree at East 96th Street, adjacent to the reservoir, are probably originals, he said, as is the majestic horsechestnut near West 102d Street and the superb Osage orange near Drip- rock Arch.
This information applies to aesculus hippocastanum.
The most familiar member of the genus worldwide is the common horse chestnut Aesculus hippocastanum.
Aesculus hippocastanum is used in Bach flower remedies.
In the foreground of the photograph is a magnificent tree of the genus Aesculus Hippocastanum.
Its Latin name is Aesculus hippocastanum.
Aesculus hippocastanum: common horse chestnut (Europe, native to the Balkans)
Horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum) pollen: a frequent cause of allergic sensitization in urban children.
Now, if you have ever seen a horse chestnut - Aesculus hippocastanum - in bloom, you know how impossible it is to ignore.
Its larvae are leaf miners on the Common Horse-chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum).
Aesculus hippocastanum (I)
They too, like the Aesculus Hippocastanum, sometimes survived World War II.
Aesculus hippocastanum (horse chestnut)
Almost certainly refers to Aesculus hippocastanum (the European Horse Chestnut)
Aesculus hippocastanum is a large deciduous tree, commonly known as horse-chestnut or conker tree.
The larvae feed on Quercus, Aesculus hippocastanum and Betula.
Common trees in the parks and streets of the city are the horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), the acacia, the elm (Ulmus minor), and the stone pine.
The nut of the horse-chestnut tree (Aesculus species, especially Aesculus hippocastanum), is called a conker in the British Isles.
Another likely reference to Aesculus hippocastanum (the European Horse Chestnut), not Castanea sativa (Sweet Chestnut).
The species is polyphagous, feeding on various deciduous plants, including Aesculus hippocastanum, Fagus sylvatica and Quercus species.
Aescin or escin is a mixture of saponins with anti-inflammatory, vasoconstrictor and vasoprotective effects found in Aesculus hippocastanum (the horse chestnut).
Aesculus hippocastanum is native to a small area in the Pindus Mountains mixed forests and Balkan mixed forests of South East Europe.
If, instead of planting Aesculus hippocastanum, we had all planted other horse chestnuts as well, then the horse chestnut leaf miner moth would not have had such a field day.
The red horse chestnut, a hybrid of Aesculus hippocastanum and the American Aesculus pavia, was still noted in Fulham Palace gardens as late as 1751.
Quercetin 3,4'-diglucoside is a flavonol glycoside found in onions (Allium cepa) and in horse chestnut seeds (Aesculus hippocastanum).
A fungal infestation, leaf blotch disease, or Guignardia aesculi, affects the horse chestnut, Aesculus hippocastanum, and the related Ohio buckeye, Aesculus glabra.
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