Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Now he went back to the woods to find more oak and tanbark.
In Europe, oak is a common source of tanbark.
Marty walked off the tanbark to the scattered cheers of the crowd.
I skidded to a stop, breathing in the smell of fresh tanbark.
They had worked hard during the season and had won new laurels on the tanbark.
There are thrilling acts high above the tanbark.
Never mind his falls feet and his tanbark complexion.
And I went up into my saddle and we taken out of there like hell a-chasin' tanbark.
In these areas, the word "mulch" may refer to peat moss or to very fine tanbark.
Haskins grinned, and spat tobacco juice at the tanbark in the arena.
De Booys was granted permission to build a windmill to produce cement, paint, and tanbark.
The turning down to Launde Park was five hundred metres past the end of the tanbark oak saplings.
Various tanbark oak or stone oak species in genera:
There is a second-label cabernet, Tanbark Hill, made from wine he doesn't think is right for his first label.
In the Ringling show he is a big kid playing with big toys and he bounces around the tanbark like a human cartoon hero.
At a dozen other rodeos he was considered, by performers as well as spectators, one of the finest all-around cowboys riding the tanbark.
Where tanbark sails had caught clean wind only moments before, charred beams wallowed amid ash-smeared waves.
Lithocarpus cleistocarpus (common name, Tanbark Oak) is a species of Stone-oak native to China.
The respite proved false: for across the cleared waters to the south loomed the tanbark sails of an inbound fleet of black ships.
In some areas of the United States, such as central Pennsylvania and northern California, tanbark is often called "mulch," even by manufacturers and distributors.
At mid-level elevations there are also considerable numbers of Tanbark oak and Pacific Madrone contributing to the canopy.
Reuda laughed and nodded and went back to her husband's tannery, taking the stink of hides and sour tanbark with her.
Nineteenth century loggers used oxen to drag huge firs and smaller Tanbark oak (Lithocarpus densiflorus) trees along the trail.
In New York, on the slopes of Mount Tremper, hemlock bark was a major source of tanbark during the 19th century.
The brigantine had diminished astern until tanbark sails showed as a speck against flawless ocean; ahead, no life stirred but the strafing flight of shearwaters.