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Tag Archives: #Advent Botany
#AdventBotany 2019, Day 1: Clementine, Satsuma, Tangerine; what’s the difference?
By Alastair Culham Welcome to #AdventBotany 2019 and the start of another journey into quirky, curious, hostorical and, above all, botanical information about the plants associated with the winter season. This year I’m expanding on John Warren’s story of Tangerines … Continue reading →
Posted in Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany, #AdventBotany2019, Advent, Citrus, Clementine, Satsuma, tangerine
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1 Comment
AdventBotany 2018, Day 12: the story of Amaryllis
By Eirini Antonaki Today’s advent botany blog will focus on a popular seasonal ornamental, Amaryllis, with its vibrant colouration ranging from pink, to purple and occasionally red. Etymologically, the name Amaryllis (Αμαρυλλίς) is derived from ancient Greek verb ἀμαρύσσω which … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany 2018, Day 8: the hyacinth
I was sitting at my breakfast table this morning thinking ‘what plant should be next for #AdventBotany2018″? The rich smell of the blue hyacinth in front of me was filling the room when I had one of those ‘you idiot’ … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany 2018, Day 7: Reindeer Games
By Claire Smith We all know what to leave out for Father Christmas – a nice mince pie and a glass of sherry. Or maybe milk, if you don’t want Santa sozzled on his sleigh. But what about Rudolph and the … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany 2018 Day 6: Christmas Bells
Christmas bells is the name for a colourful South African geophyte (plant with an underground storage organ), Sandersonia aurantiaca, due to the appearance of its bell shaped flowers appearing in December-January. Of course, if you grow this in the UK … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany2018, Day 4: The Golden Bough
By John David Not an obvious topic for Advent, but bear with me, the connection will become clear. The Golden Bough is most famously the title of a book written by Sir James Frazer and first published in two volumes … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science, RHS research
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany 2018, Day 3: The Pomander – a smorgasbord of Lamiaceae and Rutaceae with a pinch of Sperm Whale Poo
by Fi Young As a child I remember my grandparents giving a pomander as a Christmas gift. Their pomander was made from an orange studded with cloves, and I don’t mean cloves of garlic unless you want to ward off … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany 2018, Day 2: The homeless drupe – a look at the ‘precocious’ Prunus that US Marines won’t go near
By Meg Cathcart-James What do Alexander the Great, Henry the VIII’s gardener and ancient China have in common? They all enjoyed apricots!
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, #AdventBotany2018, Advent
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1 Comment
#AdventBotany 2018, Day 1: Put a Cherry on the Top!
For me, the glace cherry is a staple ingredient of Christmas cooking. I include them in both my Christmas cake and Christmas pudding recipes – both are based on ‘Delia Smith’s Christmas’ although her original version of the pudding recipe … Continue reading →
#AdventBotany Day 12: Feijoa – Acca sellowiana
By Adam Idoine My childhood in New Zealand was punctuated every autumn by a bounty of a sweet, fragrant fruit called feijoas. Our garden, like many of our neighbours’ contained a couple of non-descript evergreen shrubs. Every summer they would … Continue reading →
Posted in Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science
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Tagged #Advent Botany, Acca sellowiana, Adam Idoine, Advent, Feijoa
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1 Comment