Other toxicologic causes of veno-occlusive disease include plant & herbal sources of pyrrolizidine alkaloids such as Borage, Boneset, Coltsfoot, T'u-san-chi, Comfrey, Heliotrope ( sunflower seeds ), Gordolobo, Germander, and Chaparral.
12.
As a recognised product of importance with regional heritage, along the lines of Dundee Cake, Kendal Mint Cake and other regional creations, coltsfoot rock has gained similar acknowledgements from the UK Regional Tourism Board, Lancashire Tourism Council and culinary organisations such as Gourmet Britain.
13.
A Colusa County program aimed at stopping adolescent tobacco use has given cans of Golden Eagle Herbal Chew _ a hibiscus and ginger flavored herbal mix made by Coltsfoot Inc ., in Grants Pass, Ore . _ to children who were using Skoal and Copenhagen, two of the most popular tobacco snuffs.
14.
Five new characters were introduced : Flyairth, a doe who threatens to undermine the stability of Watership Down; Sandwort, a disrespectful young buck who eventually changes his ways; Coltsfoot, a depressed buck whom Fiver befriends; Stonecrop, an escaped hutch rabbit; and Nyreem, an Efrafan doe with an injured leg.
15.
Although it remains rich in herbs, the characteristic features of magnesian limestone grassland were lost during the translocation : blue moor-grass is uncommon, while coltsfoot, " Tussilago farfara ", and field sow-thistle, " Sonchus arvensis ", which entered the grassland during translocation, persist.
16.
Despite some terraced housing being built in at Crossfield Park and Coltsfoot Gardens in the 1970 & ndash; 80's, the character of the suburb today remains suburban; the land is split 50 / 50 between residential properties and open green space and only 11.3 % of the residential properties today are council housing.
17.
From the Hortus Botanicus Leiden the botanical garden of Leiden many of Siebold's plants spread to Europe and from there to other countries . " Hosta " and " Hortensia ", " Azalea ", and the Japanese butterbur and the coltsfoot as well as the Japanese larch began to inhabit gardens across the world.