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  2. How to Prevent Dandelions From Taking Over Your Yard - AOL

    www.aol.com/absolute-best-way-rid-dandelions...

    This means that even if you treat your lawn—but a neighbor a few doors down doesn't—the seeds of dandelions can float on the wind and end up in your yard, Waltz says. In fact, dandelion seeds ...

  3. Why You Should Start Drinking Dandelion Tea ASAP - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-start-drinking-dandelion-tea...

    Here’s everything you need to know about dandelion tea, including a few different ways to make—and enjoy—a cup of tea that's either sweet or bold, depending on the parts of the plant you use ...

  4. Common garden skink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_garden_skink

    The common garden skink feeds on invertebrates, including crickets, moths, slaters, earthworms, flies, grubs and caterpillars, grasshoppers, cockroaches, earwigs, slugs, dandelions, small spiders, ladybeetles and many other small insects, which makes it a very helpful animal around the garden.

  5. We’ve Found 100 Products That Pandas Keep Coming Back ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/panda-hall-fame-100...

    Is easily pulls crabgrass, dandelion and other weeds in my flower garden and yard. After I pull the weed out, I release the hold on it and drop the weed in a bucket. It’s very easy on my back.

  6. Taraxacum officinale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taraxacum_officinale

    Taraxacum officinale, the dandelion or common dandelion, [6] is a herbaceous perennial flowering plant in the daisy family, Asteraceae. The common dandelion is well known for its yellow flower heads that turn into round balls of many silver-tufted fruits that disperse in the wind .

  7. Edible plant stem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edible_plant_stem

    There are also many wild edible plant stems. In North America, these include the shoots of woodsorrel (usually eaten along with the leaves), chickweeds, galinsoga, common purslane, Japanese knotweed, winter cress and other wild mustards, thistles (de-thorned), stinging nettles (cooked), bellworts, violets, amaranth and slippery elm, among many others.

  8. My house didn't burn but ash from the L.A. fires fell in my ...

    www.aol.com/news/house-didnt-burn-ash-l...

    Yes, as long as you can remove the ash by washing the produce thoroughly, according to Dr. Gina Solomon, chief of the Division of Occupational, Environmental and Climate Medicine at UC San Francisco.

  9. Hypochaeris radicata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypochaeris_radicata

    Catsear is also known as false dandelion because it is commonly mistaken for true dandelions. The plants carry similar flowers which form windborne seeds. However, catsear flowering stems are forked and solid, whereas dandelions possess unforked stems that are hollow. Both plants have a rosette of leaves and a central taproot.