Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
In dire times the Wild Angelica has been an important source of nutrition.
Wild Angelica grows on grazing grounds, cultured land and along streams.
Wild angelica angelica sylvestris is common in fens and damp woods.
Species such as garden angelica, wild angelica, sea pea and arctic river beauty, are hardly ever found on grazing land, but have now become common.
Angelica sylvestris or Wild Angelica is a species of plant that grows about one metre tall.
Wild angelica (Angelica sylvaticum)
The hedge flora are dominated by cow parsley, and the ditches have wetland flowers including water figwort and wild angelica.
Wild Angelica (Angelica sylvestris)
Species that can be mistaken for tall invasive hogweeds (wild parsnip, garden angelica, wild angelica)
Meadow flowers to be found in Telkkämäki include the fireweed, meadow buttercup, wild angelica and red campion.
Part is maintained as wet meadow by annual mowing or grazing and Devil's-bit Scabious, Knapweed, Meadowsweet and Wild Angelica are abundant.
The steep-sided clough has an extensive system of good pathways around it, enabling visitors to experience a blanket of bluebells in the spring as well as wood sorrel and wild angelica.
Other flowering plants include Cowslip, Common Knapweed, Oxeye Daisy, Perforate St John's-wort, Wild Angelica and Meadowsweet.
Wild angelica, and the dried flowers of purple mallow, with a pressed ivy leaf or two, and also the berries of rowan, sewn into a tiny packet, with certain runes stitched on it.
Lower down the valley, species including Alpine Cinquefoil, Lily-of-the-valley, Mountain Melick and Herb Paris, blue sesleria, Common Valerian and Wild Angelica.
(POTENTILLA) Wild Angelica (ANGELICA) Wild Asparagus.
Also noted at the site are green figwort, Brooklime speedwell, wild angelica, opposite-leaved golden saxifrage, green alkanet, reed canarygrass, giant hogweed, bishopweed, celandine, and Himalayan balsam.
Wild angelica, Reedmace (bullrush), yellow meadow vetchling, Yorkshire fog grass, Tussock grass, and Meadowsweet were also noted and Brooklime speedwell grows within the ditch of the Joppa Burn inflow.
A. dahurica is also commonly known as Chinese Angelica, the Garden Angelica, Root of the Holy Ghost, and Wild Angelica, as well as its Chinese name, Bai Zhi (白芷).