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"cow parsley" Definitions
  1. a European wild plant with a lot of very small white flowers that look like lace

40 Sentences With "cow parsley"

How to use cow parsley in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cow parsley" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cow parsley". Mastering all the usages of "cow parsley" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The cow parsley was thick along the footpaths and the shade deepened under the trees.
It was at a time when the designers were experimenting with using cow parsley to make fabric.
IN THE valleys of south Wales, among grazing sheep and roads lined with cow parsley, something unusual is happening.
I'm not so sure about the lovely fennel-shaped Sèvres coffee service displayed in the Emile Gallé "Cow Parsley" Cabinet.
Six years later, the site seethes with life, barely visible trails cutting through rampant sedge and mallow, cow parsley and burdock.
The woodland beyond the borders of hedge has been tamed just enough to let sweet-scented mock orange and white cow parsley remain visible.
On a recent spring morning, the revered British perfumer makes her way through a sea of wild grass and cow parsley in an untamed quarter of London's Regent's Park.
It is, as well dressings traditionally are, made from natural materials—carnations, egg shells, cow parsley, leaves, and grass—which honestly just adds another sheen of mania to the whole affair.
Made entirely from natural materials as part of an ancient English tradition known as "well dressing," the tribute took 14 volunteers more than 120 hours to produce using carnations, chrysanthemums, camomile flowers, cow parsley, rowan berries and egg shell.
Before our time they used my room to store apples collected from those crooked trees now wading waist deep at the garden end in frilly white-capped waves of cow parsley, and laid them out in rows not touching quite.
Lying stiffly beside it amid the foaming white cow-parsley were its occupants, a man and a woman, their pale legs sticking straight out in front of them, their shocked faces as rigid as dolls' faces, their summer clothes askew.
The store's residency on Upper James Street runs through the end of May, and Lonsdale has overseen everything with a forensic eye for detail — right down to the harvested cow parsley installed by Mayfair's TukTuk Flower Studio on the shop's facade that also fills the rainbow-hued ceramics by Mexican artist Milena Muzquiz.
This isn't entirely new: The mid-20th-century English florist Constance Spry, a railway clerk's daughter, was famed for heaping sprays of cow parsley at high-society weddings and debutante balls, and the revered English gardener Beth Chatto was nearly disqualified from one of her first horticultural shows for entering native flora that one judge ridiculed as weeds.
This isn't entirely new: The mid-20th-century English florist Constance Spry, a railway clerk's daughter, was famed for heaping sprays of cow parsley at high-society weddings and debutante balls, and the revered English gardener Beth Chatto, who died in May, was nearly disqualified from one of her first horticultural shows for entering native flora that one judge ridiculed as weeds.
In addition to the oversize, Alice in Wonderlandesque paper blooms Rittson-Thomas makes for the shop, the studio's offerings have expanded from what her garden can provide seasonally — fruit blossoms in the winter, cow parsley, hyacinths and hellebore in the spring, dahlias and cosmos in the fall and tangles of sweet peas in the summer — to the flowers she finds at the Covent Garden flower market and from select purveyors including the English rose specialist Tempest, who provides stock to a very small circle of clients including 5 Hertford Street, a London social club known for its spectacular arrangements.
Cow parsley can be mistaken for similar- looking poisonous plants, among them poison hemlock and fool's parsley. The same holds true as to giant cow parsley/giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum), the sap of which can cause severe burns after coming in contact with the skin.
Vermont has listed cow parsley on its "Watch List" of invasive species, while Massachusetts has banned the sale of the plant. It is classed as a Class B Noxious Weed in the State of Washington since 1989, where its sale is also banned. In Iceland, cow parsley has been classified as an alien invasive species.Ágengar plöntur (Invasive plants).
Cow parsley is considered to be edible, its flavour is sharper than garden chervil, with a hint of carrot, to which it is related.
Larvae are known to inhabit semi-liquid, decaying tissue of the roots of plants. There is a rearing record from decaying roots of Cow Parsley.
Adults can be seen from April to August. The larvae, known as "leatherjackets", feed on the roots of grasses, while the adults feed on umbellifers such as cow parsley.
Eristalis arbustorum is a European species of hoverfly. The size of the coloured patches on the abdomen varies with larval rearing temperature, as does wing length. They are attracted to the flowers of cow parsley, common hogweed, creeping thistle, knapweed and common yarrow.
Anthriscus sylvestris, known as cow parsley, wild chervil, wild beaked parsley, or keck, is a herbaceous biennial or short-lived perennial plant in the family Apiaceae (Umbelliferae),Webb, D.A., Parnell, J. and Doogue, D. 1996. An Irish Flora. Dundalgan Press Ltd, Dundalk. genus Anthriscus.
The site is on the Lower Lias clays of the Severn Vale. It is a woodland plantation of long standing. It consists of Oak, Ash and the understorey is Hawthorn, Blackthorn, Elder, Field Rose and Crab Apple. The ground flora is mostly Common Nettle and Cow Parsley.
Melwood is a 0.6 hectare Local Nature Reserve in Meldreth in Cambridgeshire, England. It is owned by Cambridgeshire County Council and managed by the Melwood Conservation Group. This is a woodland site next to the River Mel, with trees such as ash, hawthorn, sycamore, beech and silver birch. Ground flora include dog violet and cow parsley, while traveller's joy provides food for moths.
Cornwell's books include her autobiography Adventures of a Jelly Baby () published in 2005 which describes her childhood growing up in Britain during the war, and then in Australia where her family emigrated. She has also published several novels, including Cow and Cow Parsley in 1985, Fishcakes at the Ritz in 1989, The Seventh Sunrise in 1994, and Fear and Favour in 1996.
R. fulva is commonly found on open-structured flowers and can be spotted in grassland, woodland, along hedgerows and in parks and gardens, often on flower species such as Anthriscus sylvestris (Cow Parsley) and others of the genus Heracleum (Hogweed) and the family Asteraceae during the summer. R. fulva is a significant pollinator of two species of Hogweed, Heracleum sphondylium, and H. mantegazzianum.
Heracleum mantegazzianum, commonly known as giant hogweed, is a monocarpic perennial herbaceous flowering plant in the carrot family Apiaceae. H. mantegazzianum is also known as cartwheel-flower, giant cow parsley, giant cow parsnip, or hogsbane. In New Zealand, it is also sometimes called wild parsnip (not to be confused with Pastinaca sativa) or wild rhubarb. Giant hogweed is native to the western Caucasus region of Eurasia.
The hedge flora are dominated by cow parsley, and the ditches have wetland flowers including water figwort and wild angelica. A small adjacent woodland, which is probably ancient, has nesting birds, including sparrowhawks, willow warblers and stock doves. Muntjac deer are often seen there. The fields on either side of the lane are traditionally managed, some grazed by horses and others managed as hay meadows.
In some parts the shore has sand and is easily accessible. There are also synanthrope plants in the lake: burdock, lion's tail, common nettle, cow parsley, tetterwort and common wormwood. To the southeastern part of the lake, the peninsula becomes more wider and the plants become luxuriant. There are different types of plants in that part than elsewhere: there are blueberries, blackberries and moss, and in the autumn mushrooms grow.
Logan's Meadow is a 1.1 hectare Local Nature Reserve in Cambridge. It is owned by Cambridge City Council and managed by the council together with City Greenways Project. This site of the bank of the River Cam has pasture with tortoiseshell and comma butterflies, and flowers such as cow parsley and cuckoo flowers. Starling roost in trees in the autumn, and there are freshwater mussels in the river.
The site is mainly woodland, with the main trees being sycamore oak, aspen and ash. The understorey is composed of snowberry, elder, elm, blackthorn and hawthorn, with ground plants which are tolerant of shade such as cow parsley, nettles and ivy. 25 species of birds and 150 of plants have been recorded at the site, and it also has frogs, toads and newts. Conservation work is carried out the Westbere Copse Association.
Cow parsley grows in sunny to semi-shaded locations in meadows and at the edges of hedgerows and woodland. It is a particularly common sight by the roadside. It is sufficiently common and fast- growing to be considered a nuisance weed in gardens. Cow parsley's ability to grow rapidly through rhizomes and to produce large quantities of seeds in a single growing season has made it an invasive species in many areas of the United States.
In 1979 Lewisham Council purchased the land and established a nature reserve on the site with the help of the local branch of the London Wildlife Trust. The existing vegetation was bramble, ivy and cow parsley, and species such as yellow archangel and wood anemone have since been planted. The reserve also has three small ponds and a stand of stag's-horn sumach. The entrance on Brookmill Road between Elverson Road and Albyn Road is kept locked and there is no public access.
Mine on cow parsley The larvae make a short upper-surface gallery following a leaf margin which widens, so that within the confined limits of some umbelliferous leaves often forms a secondary blotch. The frass is in two untidy rows of isolated grains. Larvae leave the leaf through a semi-circular slit in the lower epidermis to pupate in the soil. Mines and larvae can be found throughout the winter, the first generation from April to July although larvae can be found feeding through most of the year.
A number of phototoxic plant species in the carrot family have become invasive species, including wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa) and the tall hogweeds of the genus Heracleum, namely, Persian hogweed (Heracleum persicum), Sosnowsky's hogweed (Heracleum sosnowskyi), and giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum). In particular, the public health risks of giant hogweed are well known. Other plant species in the family Apiaceae that are associated with phytophotodermatitis include the blister bush (Notobubon galbanum), cow parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris), wild carrot (Daucus carota), various species of the genus Angelica (e.g., Korean angelica Angelica gigas), and most (if not all) species of the genus Heracleum (esp.
The plant looks like the wild carrot plant (Daucus carota). One can distinguish the two from each other by hemlock's smooth texture, mid-green, quite vivid, color and typical height of large clumps being least 1.5 metres, twice the maximum of wild carrot. Also, wild carrot has hairy stems that lack the purple blotches; hemlock's height is often reached instead by similar giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) in the same family. It is less readily confused with harmless cow parsley, with very pale, weaker stems and tiny red-and-green leaves next to many of its flower stems which colonises bright areas (Anthriscus sylvestris).
Adults are found feeding on Carolina buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica), European beech (Fagus sylvatica), Alder buckthorn (Frangula alnus), Pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) and Manna Ash (Fraxinus ornus), Buck's-beard (Aruncus dioicus), Ground-elder (Aegopodium podagraria), hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna), Anthriscus and Rosa canina in Spring and Summer. The larvae develop in fungi infested dead branches of deciduous trees. The larval development is annual and the adult hatches from the end of May to the middle of June. The adults are usually seen in flowers of hawthorn Crataegus monogyna, rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), whitebeam (Sorbus intermedia), cow parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris) and Apiaceae.
The head is pale brown. There are five instars. Larva of Epermenia aequidentellus found on wild carrot (Daucus carota) have a dark dorsal line and a black head. The larvae feed on various Apiaceae species, including ground elder (Aegopodium podagraria), garden angelica (Angelica archangelica litoralis), angelica (Angelica sylvestris), bur-chervil (Anthriscus caucalis), chervil (Anthriscus cerefolium), cow parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris), celery (Apium graveolens), lesser water-parsnip (Berula erecta), caraway (Carum carvi), Chaerophyllum hirsutum, rough chervil (Chaerophyllum temulum), cowbane (Cicuta virosa), hemlock (Conium maculatum), wild carrot (Daucus carota), giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum), hogweed (Heracleum sphondylium), lovage (Levisticum officinale), water dropwort (Oenanthe species), parsnip (Pastinaca sativa), Peucedanum species, burnet- saxifrage (Pimpinella saxifraga), moon carrot (Seseli libanotis), Silaum species, Sison amomum, great water-parsnip (Sium latifolium) and hedge parsleys (Torilis species).
Common are cow parsley, various species centaurea, tansy and verbascum densiflorum.Meadows of island Kizhi (in Russian) About 180 bird species from 15 families are known in the Kizhi area, and about 45 types of them were observed on the island. Most of them are migratory and stop on the island either for rest or nesting, such as swans, geese, ducks, lake seagulls, sterna, but there are also more stationary birds like house sparrow, Eurasian siskin, common chaffinch, skylark, jackdaw and crow. Among animals and amphibians, there are only newts (smooth newt and great crested newt), vipers, common lizard, frogs and toads (common frog, common toad and moor frog) and mice – the island is too small for larger animals which are abundant in the area.
After her husband's return from France, the Tolkiens' first child, John Francis Reuel (16 November 1917 – 22 January 2003) was born in Cheltenham. While Edith's husband was stationed at Kingston upon Hull, she and he went walking in the woods at nearby Roos, and Edith began to dance for him in a clearing among the flowering hemlock: > We walked in a wood where hemlock was growing, a sea of white > flowers.Following rural English usage, Tolkien used the name "hemlock" for > various plants with white flowers in umbels, resembling the poison hemlock; > the flowers among which Edith danced were more probably cow parsley > (Anthriscus sylvestris) or Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota). See John Garth > Tolkien and the Great War (Harper Collins/Houghton Mifflin 2003) and Peter > Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, & Edmund Weiner The Ring of Words (OUP 2006).

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