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Oil from jojoba and crambe are similar to whale oil.
The market for crambe oil is particularly developed in the USA.
Dace and pike at Crambe.
A day's work would be enough to transform it from turf to a proper home for day lilies, Crambe cordifolia and perennial salvias.
For the English village, see Crambe, North Yorkshire.
One rare species, Sea-kale (Crambe maritima), is also associated with the community:
CRAMBE, game of crambo, in which the players find rhymes for a given word.
The larvae feed on Tropaeolum majus (nasturtiums) and Crambe strigosa.
C. alaskensis and C. pulchra are better placed in Crambe or Monanchora.
Sea kale (Crambe maritima)
(greater sea kale, colewort, heartleaf crambe) is a species of herbaceous perennial plant in the family Brassicaceae, native to the Caucasus.
Later in 1611 he published a second volume of travel writings, this one entitled Coryats Crambe, or his Coleworte twice Sodden.
Crambeck near Crambe and Malton in Yorkshire is near the River Derwent.
"The Romano-British Settlement at Crambe, North Yorkshire."
Another theory also believes it simply refers to the Latin word "crambe", which means "Cabbage", speculating that cabbage crops may once have been grown in the area.
The third, northernmost section, at Porthbean Beach the nationally declining species of Sea Kale (Crambe maritima) occurs.
Neighbouring villages are Crambe, Whitwell-on-the-Hill, Welburn, Howsham, Leavening and Burythorpe.
In the mustard family (Brassicaceae), Sisymbrium altissimum, Crambe maritima, Lepidium, and Anastatica (a resurrection plant) form tumbleweeds.
Howsham railway station was a short-lived railway station between the villages of Howsham and Crambe in North Yorkshire, England.
On 6 December 1855, Andrew married Emma Fendall, youngest daughter of Henry Fendall, vicar of Crambe.
Crambe oil is an inedible seed oil, extracted from the seeds of the Crambe abyssinica, a multibranched annual plant that is native to the Mediterranean.
It has been suggested that this derives "crambe" or "crambo", derived from a Latin phrase meaning "reheated cabbage", implying "a boring old man" who spouts trite rehashed ideas.
The name comes from the Latin crambe and Greek krambē, meaning cabbage (as in crambe repetita, literally meaning re-stewed cabbage).
Rapeseed and crambe, which grow in several areas including the Great Plains, are among the plants that researchers and farmers are increasingly viewing as possible new sources of industrial raw materials and other products.
Ricketts was the son of the Rev. Richard Ernest Ricketts, sometime Vicar of Crambe, North Yorkshire and his wife Mabel Rose Williams.