Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Oh, I've got a freezer full of turkey tails.
Soon he would have to replace it with a duller turkey tail feather.
Turkey tails have ruffled edges and are made into medicinal tea.
But consider the sad saga of Samoa and the American turkey tail.
Scarlett who had been rocking and fanning herself with a turkey tail fan, stopped abruptly.
They were ambushed after a turkey tail was raised above a log by one of the concealed Creek, giving the signal for attack.
After turkey tails and mutton flaps, you'll be begging for fuata.
The wing is created from a section of mottled turkey tail or wing feather.
Turkey tails, which can be some 40 percent fat, were long a largely unwanted byproduct of the U.S. poultry industry.
Other white-rot fungi include the turkey tail, artist's conch, and tinder fungus.
Small orange-streaked wedges of turkey tail.
The turkey tail is commonly exported from America because it is considered unhealthy and cut off of the normal turkey.
Stereum ostrea - False turkey tail.
Fried turkey tails?
At least two dioxin-degrading species of mushroom indigenous to the Northern California coast could work, he said: turkey tail and oyster mushrooms.
After World War II, cheap imported turkey tail became popular in Samoa.
(reishi or lingzhi) and Trametes versicolor (turkey tail).
Turkey tail (Trametes versicolor)
By example, due to its resembling multiple colors in the tail of wild turkey, T. versicolor is commonly called turkey tail.
As we marched off into the woods, the birds were singing, Jamie was announcing turkey tails (Trametes versicolor) - more fungus!
Adjacent to these seedlings are rows of fanlike false turkey tail fungi, gray and leathery with smooth tan undersides.
Stereum hirsutum, also called False Turkey Tail, is a fungus typically forming multiple brackets on dead wood.
To combat obesity, turkey tails were banned from 2007 to 2013, only allowed back in Samoa to appease the demands of the World Trade Organization.
Turkey tail or turkey butt has an international exportation market in places such as Micronesia, Samoa, and Ghana.
A gravel-surfaced road called Turkey Tail services the south side camps and connects to Route 11 at Partridge Cove.