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Category Archives: Herbarium RNG
#AdventBotany Day 23: Rosemary, love and controversy
By Alastair Culham Rosemary makes a tasty addition to many savoury dishes. My favourite is a rub of salt and crushed fresh rosemary leaves put on potatoes before roasting but it’s also lovely with lamb and even with citrus based … Continue reading →
#AdventBotany Day 22: Put a cork in it
By Ali Ayres It’s decided, 2017 is the year I finally contribute to this fine festive botanical blogging tradition. But what should I write about? Holly? Ivy? All the usual suspects have already been covered –and excellently to boot. Maybe … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #AdventBotany, #AdventBotany2017, Advent, Ali Ayres, MSc Plant Diversity, taxonomy
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#AdventBotany Day 21: The qulliq brings light and heat to Canada’s Inuit Nunangat in the dark winter
By Dawn Bazely Christmas day at the North Pole is dark. In Inuit Nunangat, the Inuit homelands of Canada, the Arctic Circle (66.6 degrees), marks the latitude where the noon sun is just visible on December 21st, the northern winter … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #AdventBotany, Advent, Dawn Bazely
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#AdventBotany Day 20: Holly
By Patricia Francis The Winter Solstice has been celebrated in many cultures for thousands of years. In our northern latitudes evergreens show how life continues even in the depths of winter. In pre-Christian times evergreen boughs were hung in winter … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #AdventBotany2017, Advent, Gallery Oldham #AdventBotany, Holly
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#AdventBotany Day 19: Christmas Kalanchoe – Kalanchoe blossfeldiana
By Will Simpson The genus Kalanchoe (the preferred pronunciation is kal-un-KOH-ee(1)) belongs to the Crassulaceae family. Like other members of this family, such as Aeonium, Crassula, Echeveria and Sedum, Kalanchoes tend to be succulent evergreen perennials, come from arid environments … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #AdventBotany, #AdventBotany2017, Advent, MSc Plant Diversity, Will Simpson
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#AdventBotany Day 18: Cyclamen persicum: a Christmas misnomer?
By Karen Andrews They say that you should never judge a book by its cover. Walter C. Blasdale’s ‘Cyclamen persicum: Its Natural and Cultivated Forms’ is an unassuming, concise volume that normally sits in the restricted access section of the … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #AdventBotany, #AdventBotany2017, Advent, Karen Andrews, MSc Plant Diversity
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany Day 17: A tough nut to crack!
By Alastair Culham Filling your lap with the sharp fragments of nut shells as you work through a bowl of shell-on nuts is one of the pleasures of Christmas. Less fun is later treading on the sharp fragments that have … Continue reading →
#AdventBotany Day 16: Cardamom: The Queen of Spices
By Maria Christodoulou & Kalman Konyves With Christmas approaching quickly, many of you are braving the cold and crowds to complete your Christmas shopping. If you do have time for a break you may enjoy one of the most popular … Continue reading →
#AdventBotany Day 15: A holiday pineapple for the table
By Katherine Preston and Jeanne Osnas (The Botanist in the Kitchen) This deep dive into pineapple anatomy is our contribution this year to the very fun Advent Botany essay collection, a celebration of plants that are at least somewhat tangentially … Continue reading →
#AdventBotany Day 14: Trading nutmeg and swapping islands
By Helen Miller On 23rd December 1616 Nathaniel Courthope came into view of Pulo Run, an island situated in the Moluccas (Indonesia), which have been known as the Spice Islands of the East Indies, and is the region from which … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #MScPlDiv, Advent, Helen Miller
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