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Breckland Thyme (Thymus serpyllum)
There isn't enough information available to know how wild thyme might work.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of wild thyme for these uses.
So they were married, and on their wedding night she made him a cake of wild thyme.
Wild thyme and sea-thrift, to lift the weight from my heart.
We walk through hills fragrant with wild thyme and oregano.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for wild thyme.
The tiny palace was soon ready, and a fresh bed made of wild thyme, which smelt delicious.
Talk with your healthcare provider if you have thyroid problems and want to start taking wild thyme.
Some people apply wild thyme directly to the skin for arthritis and sprains.
Crushing wild thyme between my fingers, I breathed deep.
He drew his dagger, for no worse purpose than to draw patterns in the wild thyme.
I saw saxifrages and wild thyme and others that were unfamiliar to me.
Large Blue caterpillars feed on wild thyme or marjoram flowers for the first few days of development.
The youth departed, weeping, and met the little hare, who was munching wild thyme.
People take wild thyme for breathing problems including cough, bronchitis, and swollen airways.
But like Titania's hidden bank where the wild thyme blows, these plum places remain, for the most part, anonymous.
But he wanted to pick a bunch of wild thyme and some blackberries by moonlight, and ran out after the others.
As we stepped out of the car, the air was filled with the scent of wild thyme, crushed by its wheels.
The appropriate dose of wild thyme depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
The flora include chalk grassland-loving species such as marjoram and wild thyme.
The smell of tobacco smoke was sharp in the air, and crushed wild thyme where their boots trod on it.
The fully grown butterfly eats wild thyme, ground-elder, and blackberry flowers.
Wild thyme and flowers cover the landscape now, and the scented breeze offered no clues.
Wild thyme, Thymus capitatus, essential oil seasonal changes and antimycotic activity.
Olives smelled of wild thyme and mountains.
The best for the purpose is creeping thyme, sometimes called mother-of-thyme.
Grown with other creeping thymes, makes a wonderfully fragrant mat.
A. When you say hot, dry and stony, you are describing the perfect environment for creeping thymes.
The stone slabs were laid on sand to allow creeping thyme to spread - a very Highgrove touch.
But among the best crack fillers, she adds, are the various creeping thymes (Thymus serpyllum).
Creeping thyme, also called wild thyme, is Thymus Serpyllum.
Creeping thyme needs practically no care once established, but the more upright varieties, including common thyme, will turn woody and unattractive after a few years.
For example golden thyme, lemon thyme and creeping thyme can all refer to more than one cultivar.
And in that small space are irises, roses, lamb's-ears, creeping thyme, honeysuckle and lavender.
Stones from the pool's terrace have been removed here and there, and planted with creeping thyme and lemon mint.
Thymus serpyllum (wild thyme, creeping thyme) is an important nectar source plant for honeybees.
A shed that sits partly on a steep slope, inaccessible to the lawn mower, is surrounded by lilyturf and creeping thyme.
The inner paths are simply red-brown gravel, with a circle of beautifully laid old brick planted in creeping thyme beneath the pergola.
Fragrance Underfoot Q. Creeping thyme grows between the stone pavers on the terrace of our summer house.
Creeping thyme can be used in the kitchen, too, but its flavor is not as strong as that of common herb-garden thyme (T. vulgaris).
The front yard is a sea of low ground cover -loosestrife, mondo grass and creeping thyme - dotted with islands of trees and grasses.
The path was bordered with creeping thyme, the scent of which made an agreeable counterpoint to the earthy odors arising from my bearers.
"Creeping Thyme" and "Wild Thyme" redirect here.
A. Of the low growers, creeping thyme is edible, but less aromatic than mother of thyme, which is both edible and tasty.
At length I got up and walked to the door, my skirts brushing the trailing chamomile and creeping thyme, sending a sweet scent into the cool morning air.
The landscape designer suggested creeping thyme as ground cover, but that would have necessitated stepping stones --or shoes - to negotiate the walk from bathhouse to pool.
A common name is Mother-of-Thyme; "creeping thyme" and "wild thyme" may be used where Thymus serpyllum, normally called thus, is not found.
Mr. Bouley - who has several sources for herbs, including a friend's 80-acre farm near Storrs, Conn. - spikes ice creams with creeping thyme.
I'm going to take a pickax to some of the cracks, add a bit of sandy soil, and plant creeping thyme and sedums that can take the heat.
For low edgings in sunny areas, I like creeping thyme (Thymus serpyllum), catmint (Calamintha nepeta), sedums and perennial dianthus.
Prostrate thyme (Thymus serpyllum ) is another good crevice plant (see above).
But among the best crack fillers, she adds, are the various creeping thymes (Thymus serpyllum).
Thymus serpyllum (Wild Thyme) is an important nectar source plant for honeybees.
Creeping thyme, also called wild thyme, is Thymus Serpyllum.
The larvae feed on Thymus praecox and Thymus serpyllum.
Breckland Thyme (Thymus serpyllum)
The larva feed on wild thyme (Thymus polytrichus, Thymus serpyllum, etc).
A common name is Mother-of-Thyme; "creeping thyme" and "wild thyme" may be used where Thymus serpyllum, normally called thus, is not found.
Thymus serpyllum coccineus has crimson flowers and dark foliage, while T. s. Albus has lighter green leaves and dainty white flowers in early summer.
For low edgings in sunny areas, I like creeping thyme (Thymus serpyllum), catmint (Calamintha nepeta), sedums and perennial dianthus.
The larvae have been recorded feeding on Artemisia vulgaris, Thymus serpyllum, Scrophularia, Gnaphalium, Helichrysum and Thalictrum species.
Garden Thyme, Iper, Mother of Thyme, Serpolet, Serpyllum, Shepherd's Thyme, Thymus serpyllum.
This thyme species (and Thymus serpyllum) has escaped cultivation in North America, and is a weed or invasive species in some habitats in the United States.
It was described by Merritt Lyndon Fernald in 1900, who gave it the epithet serpyllifolia because of its small, shiny leaves-similar to the leaves of Thymus serpyllum.
Raal A, Paaver U, Arak E, Orav A. Content and composition of the essential oil of Thymus serpyllum L. growing wild in Estonia.
On grasslands Bird's-foot Trefoil Lotus corniculatus, Common Rock-rose Helianthemum nummularium, Horseshoe Vetch Hippocrepis comosa and Wild Thyme Thymus serpyllum are used.
Thymus serpyllum, known by the common names of Breckland thyme, wild thyme or creeping thyme, is a species of flowering plant in the mint family Lamiaceae, native to most of Europe and North Africa.
Thymus citriodorus has had many different names over time, including Thymus x citriodorus, Thymus fragrantissimus, Thymus serpyllum citratus, Thymus serpyllum citriodorum, and more.
A visit two weeks ago to Oliver Nurseries in Fairfield, Conn., yielded a dozen new diminutive species, among them a dwarf azalea, mother-of-thyme (Thymus serpyllum), creeping speedwell (Veronica repens), Sedum pluricaule, white phlox and several hybrid dianthus.
All contain rare species such as Rosser's sac spider Clubiona rosserae and the soldier-fly Odontomyia angulata as well as Stone Curlew and plant species such as Breckland Wild Thyme Thymus serpyllum and Spring Speedwell Veronica verna.
The larva feed on various herbaceous plants, including Thymus glabrescens, Calluna vulgaris, Artemisia campestris, Rumex acetosella, Thymus serpyllum, Medicago lupulina, Vicia, Lotus, Trifolium, Cytisus scoparius, Thalictrum, Galium, Taraxacum officinale and Convolvulus arvensis.