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Trees such as dwarf birch, willows, northern Labrador tea (Dryas) and alders grow in the warmer areas of the region, the Mackenzie River delta and the Yukon coast.
In the montane region, the humid soils are covered with flowers such as the northern Labrador tea, cottonsedge, the Goldilocks buttercup, St Olaf's Candlestick, common selfheal and common marsh-bedstraw.
Ledum palustre), commonly known as Marsh Labrador tea, northern Labrador tea or wild rosemary, is a flowering plant in the subsection Ledum of the large genus Rhododendron in the family Ericaceae.
The site is enveloped in the scent of wild rosemary.
Around us flourished fields of wild rosemary and thyme.
Gray scrubby bushes - wild rosemary and thyme - grew everywhere.
And local veal roasted in wild rosemary with polenta.
I smell wild rosemary in your neck.
Then I saw that there were also great thickets of wild rosemary and swathes of camomile.
Following old mule trails, the path picks its way through centuries-old woods and Mediterranean scrub that is fragrant with wild rosemary.
Wild rosemary may refer to:
The scent of the wild rosemary and jacaranda growing in the dunes could not mask the stench of decomposition.
A more intriguing gift, perhaps, is a bottle of white truffle oil, an exotic orange spiced tea or a jar of wild rosemary.
Peloponnese's fragrant handpicked wild rosemary from Greece is $3.75 a jar at Bloomingdale's stores.
Wild rosemary is good for a range of ills, including "rheumatism that starts in the feet," "black eyes" and "chronic bronchitis."
And eggplant caviar tastes as if the vegetables were buffeted by a Provencal wind perfumed with wild rosemary and bay leaves.
I am half-way up a crack in the mountain-side, struggling to keep my balance and to tug a root of wild rosemary out of the ground.
What it has are things like echinacea, augustifolia (cone flower), wild rosemary, nettle, citronella oil and eucalyptus oil.
Commonly known as the Coastal Daisybush, or wild rosemary, it was one of the first edible plants to be recognised as such by Europeans.
Wild Rosemary (Rhododendron tomentosum)
Sprinkled generously with sprigs of wild rosemary, this is a lively cheese with well-developed flavor, a bit tame and wild at the same time.
It consisted of a burnt smell of baked earth, mixed with the odours of wild rosemary and thyme, still with the tang of the sea.
(CANAIGRE) Wild Rosemary.
Ophélie offers a sprig of wild rosemary to a young girl and a periwinkle to another (Ophélie: Partegez-vous mes fleurs - "Share my flowers").
Wild rosemary scrub and longleaf pine flatwoods habitats are eminently suitable for construction, but the great majority of Florida endemic (unique) species are found in these habitats.
Environmentalism has also swept over the mountains of the northwest, a rugged and largely unspoiled region where the walking tracks have the scent of wild rosemary and umbrella pines.
There were skid marks behind the Pontiac where it had spun up the driveway, clipping off two of Ben's birdhouses and grinding a patch of wild rosemary to rags.
Wild Rosemary or Marsh Labrador Tea (Rhododendron tomentosum or Ledum palustre; Pelkinis gailis)
The first element is probably the name of the plant pors or finnmarkspors (Rhododendron tomentosum).
Rhododendron tomentosum is used in herbalism to make a tisane called "Labrador tea".
The larvae feed on Rhododendron tomentosum.
Rhododendron tomentosum grows in peaty soils, shrubby areas, moss and lichen tundra.
Rhododendron tomentosum (syn.
Some schools of homeopathy consider Rhododendron tomentosum to be a specific remedy for puncture wounds produced by sharp-pointed objects or bites.
Wild Rosemary (Rhododendron tomentosum)
The larvae feed on the leaves of Vaccinium uliginosum, Vaccinium oxycoccos and Rhododendron tomentosum.
Rhododendron tomentosum, Rhododendron groenlandicum, and Rhododendron neoglandulosum grow slowly, so pick individual leaves rather than whole branches, and harvest from different shrubs.
The larvae feed on Rhododendron tomentosum but possibly also other plants, because the species has been found in areas of Norway and Sweden where R. tomentosum is not present.
Wild Rosemary or Marsh Labrador Tea (Rhododendron tomentosum or Ledum palustre; Pelkinis gailis)
James' Tea, Ledi Palustris Herba, Ledum palustre, Ledum Silvestre, Marsh Citrus, Moth Herb, Rhododendron palustre, Rhododendron tomentosum var.
Locally uncommon plants include Round-leaved Sundew Drosera rotundifolia, Marsh Cinquefoil Potentilla palustris, Bottle Sedge Carex rostrata, Common Lousewort Pedicularis sylvatica and Fen Bedstraw Galium uliginosum and the nationally rare Labrador-tea Rhododendron tomentosum.