When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: natural pain killing plants for birds in winter near me free shipping

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 5 Easy Ways to Make Your Backyard a Bird Haven This Winter ...

    www.aol.com/5-easy-ways-backyard-bird-182652938.html

    "Consider adding a bird bath or water dish near your food resource. Keep this water thawed and fresh." Ceramic birdbaths may crack in cold weather, so plastic or metal baths are safer.

  3. 14 Outdoor Plants That'll Survive All Winter Long - AOL

    www.aol.com/14-outdoor-plants-thatll-survive...

    "A lovely bonus of this plant is that winter birds and other wildlife love to feed on the berries," she adds. Zones: 4 to 7 Size: 3 to 4 feet tall x 3 to 5 feet wide

  4. Dendrocnide moroides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendrocnide_moroides

    D. moroides is a straggly perennial shrub, usually flowering and fruiting when less than 3 m (10 ft) tall, but it may reach up to 10 m (33 ft) in height. It is superficially similar to Dendrocnide cordifolia, with the most obvious difference being the point of attachment of the petiole to the leaf blade—where D. moroides is peltate, i.e. the stalk attaches to the underside of the leaf and ...

  5. This mountain tree delivers a bounty of winter fruit for ...

    www.aol.com/mountain-tree-delivers-bounty-winter...

    Interestingly, it's often a shrubbier plant the farther north you go, where it may be found at lower elevations. Actually, a good many woody species share this distributional size effect.

  6. Urtica dioica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urtica_dioica

    Urtica dioica is a dioecious, herbaceous, and perennial plant. It grows to 0.9 to 2 metres (3 to 7 feet) tall in the summer and dying down to the ground in winter. [6] It has widely spreading rhizomes and stolons, which are bright yellow, as are the roots.

  7. Pisonia brunoniana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pisonia_brunoniana

    Pisonia brunoniana is a small tree, spreading to 6 metres (20 ft) or more tall. The wood is soft and the branches are brittle. The large leaves are opposite or ternate, glabrous, and glossy, entire (simple with smooth margins), and obtuse to rounded at apex.

  8. Pittosporum angustifolium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pittosporum_angustifolium

    Pittosporum angustifolium weeping shrub or tree up to about 10 m (33 ft) high. It has thick fissured, fibrous or flaky bark. Its leaves are arranged alternately, oblong, linear or narrowly elliptic, curved, 50–90 mm (2.0–3.5 in) long and 6–11 mm (0.24–0.43 in) wide on a petiole 5–14 mm (0.20–0.55 in) long.

  9. Monotropa hypopitys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monotropa_hypopitys

    Monotropa hypopitys, the so-called Dutchman's pipe, false beech-drops, pinesap, or yellow bird's-nest, is a herbaceous perennial plant, formerly classified in the families Monotropaceae or Pyrolaceae, but now included within the subfamily Monotropoideae of the family Ericaceae.