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Hazel Collection (page 6)

"Hazel: A Timeless Beauty and a Symbol of Strength" In Picture No. 10851598, we are transported to Wallsend-on-Tyne, where the shipbuilding industry thrived

Background imageHazel Collection: Weaving willow around a hazel rod frame

Weaving willow around a hazel rod frame

Background imageHazel Collection: Pushing hazel rods into the grass around a pot to create a willow wigwam

Pushing hazel rods into the grass around a pot to create a willow wigwam

Background imageHazel Collection: Botany, Leaves and fruits of Holly Ilex aquifolium, White birch Betula alba

Botany, Leaves and fruits of Holly Ilex aquifolium, White birch Betula alba, Honeysuckle Lonicera periclymenum
Botany - Leaves and fruits of Holly (Ilex aquifolium), White birch (Betula alba), Honeysuckle (Lonicera periclymenum), Hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna), Cotoneaster, Ivy (Hedera helix)

Background imageHazel Collection: Whole hazel nuts and walnuts, cracked hazel nut by nutcracker

Whole hazel nuts and walnuts, cracked hazel nut by nutcracker

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel (Corylus avellana) leaves

Hazel (Corylus avellana) leaves in autumn

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel pollen grains, SEM C018 / 0308

Hazel pollen grains, SEM C018 / 0308
Hazel pollen grains, coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM). Hazel pollen is distributed by the wind from catkins. The pollen is very small and light

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel (Corylus avellana) tree, artwork C016 / 3385

Hazel (Corylus avellana) tree, artwork C016 / 3385
Hazel (Corylus avellana) tree. Artwork of a common hazel (Corylus avellana) tree (left), with a close-up showing its hazelnuts (upper right)

Background imageHazel Collection: Red squirrel, artwork C016 / 3165

Red squirrel, artwork C016 / 3165
Red squirrel. Artwork of a red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) eating a nut in a tree. Red squirrels are omnivorous rodents that live in woodlands across Eurasia

Background imageHazel Collection: Hamamelis virginiana, witch hazel

Hamamelis virginiana, witch hazel
Illustration from the Botany Library Plate Collection held at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageHazel Collection: Corylus avellana, hazel

Corylus avellana, hazel
One of the 36 decorative panels depicting flora that form the ceiling of the North Hall at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageHazel Collection: Corylus avellana L. CXXXVI, hazel

Corylus avellana L. CXXXVI, hazel
An illustrative plate of hazel tree foliage, catkins and fruit from the Natural History Museum Botany Library Plate Collection

Background imageHazel Collection: Corylus avellana, cob nut

Corylus avellana, cob nut
Plate 49 from Pomona Londinensis (1818) by William Hooker. Held in the Botany Library at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) leaves, growing in hedgerow on farmland, Bacton, Suffolk, England

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) leaves, growing in hedgerow on farmland, Bacton, Suffolk, England, july

Background imageHazel Collection: Witch Hazel

Witch Hazel. From Playhour Annual 1985 (1984)

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel - male catkins in wind with pollen

Hazel - male catkins in wind with pollen
ME-2136 Hazel - male catkins in wind with pollen Corylus avellana Johan De Meester contact details: prints@ardea.com tel: +44 (0) 20 8318 1401

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel - catkins covered in snow - Lower Saxony - Germany

Common Hazel - catkins covered in snow - Lower Saxony - Germany
USH-5062 Common Hazel - catkins covered in snow Lower Saxony - Germany Corylus avellana Duncan Usher contact details: prints@ardea.com tel: +44 (0) 20 8318 1401

Background imageHazel Collection: Nuts in the Fish Market in Beyoglu, Istanbul, Turkey

Nuts in the Fish Market in Beyoglu, Istanbul, Turkey

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of male catkins, covered with frost in snow covered

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of male catkins, covered with frost in snow covered hedgerow, Bacton, Suffolk, England, february

Background imageHazel Collection: Old log cabin once used by woodsmen who maintained a mainly oak and hazel wood

Old log cabin once used by woodsmen who maintained a mainly oak and hazel wood. Note the bird feeders and old knife sharpener

Background imageHazel Collection: Aerial photograph of Bernecourt, France, WW1

Aerial photograph of Bernecourt, France, WW1
Aerial photograph of a hazel wood near Bernecourt, north eastern France, during the First World War, taken from a German balloon. Date: 1 September 1916

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of bark, Grove Farm Reserve, Thurston, Suffolk, England

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of bark, Grove Farm Reserve, Thurston, Suffolk, England, november

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) coppiced woodland habitat with pathway in mist, Merrals Shaw

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) coppiced woodland habitat with pathway in mist, Merrals Shaw, Ranscombe Farm Plantlife Reserve, Kent, England, november

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) and Common Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) habit

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) and Common Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) habit, growing from crevice in limestone pavement habitat, Gait Barrows National Nature Reserve, Cumbria, England, june

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) ancient coppiced woodland habitat, Combs Wood Reserve, Combs Ford

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) ancient coppiced woodland habitat, Combs Wood Reserve, Combs Ford, Suffolk, England, april

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of leaves, growing in ancient woodland

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of leaves, growing in ancient woodland, Wolves Wood RSPB Reserve, Hadleigh, Suffolk, England, november

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) coppiced woodland, Barking Tye, Suffolk, England, april

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) coppiced woodland, Barking Tye, Suffolk, England, april

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of leaf, growing in hedgerow, Bacton, Suffolk, England, may

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of leaf, growing in hedgerow, Bacton, Suffolk, England, may

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of female flower with red stigmas and male catkin

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) close-up of female flower with red stigmas and male catkin, Dorset, England, february

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) habit, growing in hedgerow at edge of arable field, Bacton

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) habit, growing in hedgerow at edge of arable field, Bacton, Suffolk, England, june

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) coppiced ancient woodland habitat, Wolves Wood RSPB Reserve

Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) coppiced ancient woodland habitat, Wolves Wood RSPB Reserve, Hadleigh, Suffolk, England, november

Background imageHazel Collection: Leaf-miner Moth (Stigmella floslactella) larvae feeding tunnel in Hazel (Corylus sp)

Leaf-miner Moth (Stigmella floslactella) larvae feeding tunnel in Hazel (Corylus sp. ) leaf, Powys, Wales, july
Leaf-miner Moth (Stigmella floslactella) larvae feeding tunnel in Hazel (Corylus sp.) leaf, Powys, Wales, july

Background imageHazel Collection: Preserved hazel specimens

Preserved hazel specimens. Dried twigs and leaves from a hazel tree (Corylus sp.) next to a jar of hazelnuts. Photographed at Universita degli Studi, Facolta di Agraria di Portici, Naples, Italy

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazelnut

Hazelnut

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel leaves

Hazel leaves opening in spring. Dorset, UK March 2011

Background imageHazel Collection: Common hazel bud

Common hazel bud
Common hazel (Corylus avellana) bud breaking into leaf. Photographed in April, in Dorset, UK

Background imageHazel Collection: Common hazel catkins

Common hazel catkins
Common hazel (Corylus avellana) catkins. Photographed in February, in Dorset, UK

Background imageHazel Collection: Common hazel leaf

Common hazel leaf
Common hazel (Corylus avellana) leaf in late summer as autumn approaches. Photographed in September, in Dorset, UK

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel catkins (Corylus)

Hazel catkins (Corylus)
Hazel (Corylus) catkins in February. This plant uses wind pollination to reproduce. Photographed in Dorset in the United Kingdom

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel (Corylus avellana)

Hazel (Corylus avellana) showing autumn foliage and catkins. Photographed in Dorset in the United Kingdom

Background imageHazel Collection: Chalk stream flow deflectors

Chalk stream flow deflectors. Flow deflectors constructed from bundles of hazelwood branches. The purpose of deflectors like this is to increase the rate of flow

Background imageHazel Collection: Chalk stream flow deflector

Chalk stream flow deflector. Flow deflector constructed from bundles of hazelwood branches. The purpose of deflectors like this is to increase the rate of flow

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel nuts

Hazel nuts on a hazel tree (Corylus avellana). Hazel nuts grow from bracts (green, spiky) in bunches of between one and four. The nuts ripen in September and October. Photographed in August

Background imageHazel Collection: An autumn-flowering east european crocus, Crocus banaticus = Crocus iridiflorus

An autumn-flowering east european crocus, Crocus banaticus = Crocus iridiflorus, flowering among hazel leaves, Romania
ROG-13416 An autumn-flowering east european crocus flowering among hazel leaves, Romania. Crocus banaticus Latin also Crocus iridiflorus Bob Gibbons Please note that prints are for personal display

Background imageHazel Collection: Toothwort (Lathraea squamaria), parasitic on hazel and maple. Uncommon in UK

Toothwort (Lathraea squamaria), parasitic on hazel and maple. Uncommon in UK
ROG-13451 Toothwort, parasitic on hazel and maple Uncommon in UK. Lathraea squamaria Bob Gibbons Please note that prints are for personal display purposes only and may not be reproduced in any way

Background imageHazel Collection: Ancient hazel Corylus avellana coppice stool in bluebell wood at Stonebarrow, Purbeck, Dorset

Ancient hazel Corylus avellana coppice stool in bluebell wood at Stonebarrow, Purbeck, Dorset
ROG-13525 Ancient hazel coppice stool in bluebell wood Stonebarrow, Purbeck, Dorset, England Corylus avellana Bob Gibbons Please note that prints are for personal display purposes only

Background imageHazel Collection: Hazel Catkins - In winter after snowfall, Dorset UK

Hazel Catkins - In winter after snowfall, Dorset UK
ROG-13573 Hazel Catkins - In winter after snowfall Dorset UK Corylus avellana Bob Gibbons Please note that prints are for personal display purposes only and may not be reproduced in any way

Background imageHazel Collection: Common Hazel - catkins

Common Hazel - catkins
ME-1822 Common Hazel - catkins Corylus avellana Johan De Meester Please note that prints are for personal display purposes only and may not be reproduced in any way



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"Hazel: A Timeless Beauty and a Symbol of Strength" In Picture No. 10851598, we are transported to Wallsend-on-Tyne, where the shipbuilding industry thrived. Just like the sturdy vessels being constructed, Hazel exudes resilience and determination. Amidst this industrial backdrop, Hamemalis Mollis (Witch Hazel) blooms gracefully in Lady Lavery's sitting room. Its delicate petals mirror Hazel's elegance and poise as she navigates through life with grace. Sir John Lavery's painting "The Dentist" captures the essence of anticipation and bravery - qualities that resonate with Hazel as she faces challenges head-on. Hazel is no stranger to influential figures either; Michael Collins by Lady Lavery showcases her connection to history and her ability to inspire those around her. Even during times of war, such as WWI, Hazel remains an embodiment of hope. Clad in a Lucile gown for Petticoat Lane Tombola, she symbolizes unity and support for soldiers on the front lines. But let us not forget the humble origins from which our heroine derives her name - Common Hazel or hazelnut tree. Like its namesake nut, Hazel possesses both sweetness and strength that make her irresistible yet unyielding when faced with adversity. Traveling further afield to Llanfair Pg reveals another facet of our enigmatic protagonist - a deep-rooted connection to nature. The presence of a majestic Hazel Nut Tree signifies growth and abundance in all aspects of life. As World War II unfolds before us, we witness another side of this remarkable woman - one clad in uniform alongside brave men fighting for freedom. Her unwavering commitment shines through even amidst turmoil. Finally, Portrait Of Lady Lavery encapsulates it all - beauty intertwined with resilience; sophistication paired with courage; history blended seamlessly into modernity. In every stroke lies an ode to our beloved protagonist – captivating yet enigmatic, Hazel continues to leave an indelible mark on the world.