bistort การใช้
- They feed on flower nectar, including yellow bistort.
- Wives ate an herb called bistort to conceive.
- Bistort, wild garlic, nettles and dandelions are found in abundance in the meadows between the conurbations.
- The differing habitats of the area have their own populations of flora such as cranesbill, bistort, pignut and buttercup.
- The meadow is unimproved damp grassland on the bank of the River Colne, with plants such as purple loosestrife and amphibious bistort.
- In the southern site grassland plants include southern marsh-orchid, bee orchid, amphibious bistort and the rare greater tussock-sedge.
- Plants include wood anemone, bluebell and greater stitchwort and in at the southern end there is a small pond with amphibious bistort and brooklime.
- In glass canisters there were substances like bistort root, black walnut bark, camphor, deer's tongue, devil's claw, gall of the earth.
- It does not support the same diversity of plants as Nova Beck, but in spring and early summer, the wooded areas are thick with wild garlic, lesser celandine and bistort.
- American bistort was an important food plant used by Native Americans living in the Mountain West, and the roots are edible either raw or fire-roasted with a flavor resembling chestnuts.
- Ramon's name is given as " Ramonz bistor de rusillon " in the rubric of his poem, but the scribe had in fact confused him with another troubadour, Raimon Bistort ( Bistortz ).
- Alpine bistort, " Polygonum viviparum ", which is rare in the Pennines, is found on the steep banks, and marsh-marigold, " Caltha palustris ", is abundant in the wetter patches.
- A wide variety of grasses and herbs are present in the meadows, including the locally rare melancholy thistle, " Cirsium helenioides ", globe flower, " Trollius europaeus ", and alpine bistort, " Polygonum viviparum ".
- Susie Island is owned by the Nature Conservancy and held as the Francis Lee Jaques Memorial Preserve and is the home to some of Minnesota's rarest plants, including alpine bistort and slender hairgrass, both species of special concern, mountain or rock cranberry and common bearberry.
- As with many other alpine plants, Alpine bistort is slow-growing and produces embryonic buds one year that grow and open a few years after their formation, with an individual leaf or inflorescence taking three to four years to reach maturity from the time the buds are formed.
- On steeper banks, which are not cut, a particularly rich flora includes alpine bistort, " Polygonum viviparum ", common spotted orchid, " Dactylorhiza fuchsii ", and intermediate lady's-mantle, " Alchemilla xanthochlora ", among many others.
- The most frequent 26 ingredients are : Garden Angelica, Healing Wolfsbane, Birthwort, Bistort, Sweet Flag, Carline Thistle, Dittany, Gentian, Masterwort, viper meat, Mithridate ( another concoction in its own right ), Theriac ( yet another concoction ), white wine, and honey.
- When I sprained my wrist one day, he wrapped it in a poultice made from boiled wild strawberry leaves and yarrow . ( The swelling was noticeably diminished when I took the Ace bandage off a few hours later . ) And for dinner one evening, along with fresh trout caught in the Thorofare River, we had the bulbs of wild camus and the nut-like roots of American bistort, both of which Ron had dug up that afternoon along a riverbed.
- Species noted in 2007 include the Woodruff, Bird cherry, Primrose, Common violet, Oak, Stitchwort, Golden male ( Scaly ) fern, Bugle, Opposite-leaved Golden saxifrage, Bluebell, Dog's mercury, Broad buckler fern, Watercress, Lady fern, Male shield fern, Kidney vetch, Woodrush, Woodsedge, blackthorn, hawthorn, Marsh marigold, Foxglove, Sweet Cicely, Herb Robert, Red campion, Bistort, Ribwort plantain, Water avens, Wood avens, Moschatel, elm, alder, and many liverworts.