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Sentences with alder

al·der
A a
  • The train passes mature hardwood maple, beech, yellow birch, hickory and American linden trees, and softwood alders and willows weeping over a calm pond.
  • Birds nest in them, and bring in seeds of other trees like alders and oaks.
  • The picture is then traced onto the boards, using a pointer or toothed wheel, and marked out with cones from the alder tree or with coffee beans.
  • Everything would be awash in pale yellow-green with cattails on the alders, and the maples trailing green seed plumes.
  • The mouths of side streams also attract fish - more so if there is some overhead cover from willows, alders or some other trees.
  • The landscape's rustic tone is anticipated as visitors approach along a nearly mile-long driveway lined with redwood, alder, fir and madrone trees.
  • Just 14 acrres of broadleaf woodland remain, including oak, ash, alder and birch and several large yew trees.
  • Apple, willow, birch, poplar, citrus, alder and maple are varieties we have used.
  • Pollen studies by scientists have revealed that both of the island chains were once covered in dense woodlands of birch, alder, willow, hazel, rowan and aspen.
  • Stunted forms of tree species such as dwarf birch, alder, arctic willow, white spruce, black spruce, tamarack, least willow, net-veined willow and blue-green willow grow here.
  • Much of the weed was cleared out to allow easy angling, though plenty of silver birch, rowan, alder, sycamore and pine remain to provide a scenic backdrop.
  • Oak and hazel were probably dominant, but with an intermixture of other species, including birch, alder - a tree of wetlands - ash and elm, which varied regionally.
  • The native trees planted include oak, ash, birch, alder, hazel, yew, and Scots pine.
  • Trees which are especially suited for erosion control include varieties of birch, cedar, alder, fir, pine and redwood.
  • For the first time in 2,000 years, Scots pine, alder, birch, hazel, holly, and mountain ash are set to reclaim a large swath of the Scottish Highlands.
  • The most suitable trees for bulbs and tubers are alder, ash, birch, cherry / Japanese cherry, oak and fruit trees.
  • In Prussia the coal of the alder, limetree, poplar, elder, willow, hemp, and hazel is used for powder.
  • They set up camp at a place near Kaflia Bay that Treadwell called the Maze — because the bears had worn tunnels through the alder thickets.
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