The Contribution Of Trees To Our Lives... It Is Time To Take Stock
source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jan/03/trees-allies-against-climate-change
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French botanist Francis Hallé makes a case for the defence of trees as a powerful ally in saving the Earth's ecosystems
Frédéric Joignot
Guardian Weekly, Tuesday 3 January 2012 09.00 EST
Aerial View of the Jardin des Plantes
The Jardin des Plantes in Paris viewed from above. A tree planted in the entrance to the gardens by the French naturalist Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, in 1785 still stands today. Photograph: Yann Arthus-Bertrand/Corbis
Give me a tree and I'll save the world – that is the message that comes across from a book just published by the French botanist Francis Hallé, Du bon usage des arbres (Making good use of trees). The book is a defence of trees addressed to decision-makers and town planners. It is hard to know which specific tree to start with, but let's take as our prime example the plane tree planted by the Comte de Buffon in 1785 at the entrance to the Jardin des Plantes in Paris. Visitors can see how well it has fared 226 years on, even though it has never been pruned.
Plane trees, like many others, have a long lifespan. They are even "potentially immortal", claims Hallé. "Man is senescent, that is to say is programmed to die, but a plane tree is not," he said. After its leaves have fallen, life begins again in the spring and the tree recovers its youthful genomes. If it is not subjected to accidents, diseases or humans, the plane tree could live for centuries. "When you talk about a 100-year-old tree, it's just a kid in shorts," said the botanist, who knows of a 2,000-year-old olive tree in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin on the Côte d'Azur.
And trees create colonies. To reproduce they distribute seeds all around, but they also spread roots from which offshoots can grow. That is why 100-year-old plane trees are often surrounded by their younger brothers, and why poplars have grown for the past 10,000 years in Utah, and there are 13,000-year-old creosote bush clones in the Mojave desert of southern California, and 43,000-year-old stands of King's holly spread over an area of one kilometre in Tasmania. Hallé says: "The history of our zoological species can be found in the life of a tree. That should make us feel humble." Perhaps that is the first good turn trees do for us.
Another marvellous thing about trees is that they solve their own problems without moving. They are model citizens, decorative, quiet, economical, calm and courageous. They are content with so little, just light, water and trace elements, and silently elude their enemies by developing an arsenal of chemicals. Trees produce molecules to keep mice and insects at bay and in doing so provide man with taxol, an efficient anti-cancer drug. As we all know, lime, birch, willow, hazel and lemon trees are all used for medicinal purposes.
Humans, with a mere 2 square metres of skin, underestimate the surface area of a tree. To calculate that you need to measure both sides of each leaf, add the surface of the trunk, the branches and boughs, the perennial and feeder roots and the absorbent root hairs, not forgetting the bark pockets. A 15-metre tree in leaf would cover a total area of 200 hectares, which is the size of Monaco. A tree doubles its weight when wet, and its entire surface breathes and allows us to breathe.
Hallé believes that arboreal photosynthesis is our best ally in the fight against global warming. Buffon's plane tree, like all trees, absorbs quantities of carbon dioxide, responsible for greenhouse gases, and between 20% and 50% of matter produced by the tree, including wood, roots, leaves and fruit, is composed of CO2. When trees breathe they clean the atmosphere and retain CO2 and urban pollutants such as heavy metals, lead, manganese, industrial soot and nitrous oxide. These are stored in the wood. That is why we should refrain as much as possible from cutting down old trees. The older they are, the better they control pollutants.
At the same time, trees release oxygen that allows us to live. An adult human consumes about 700g of O2 per day, or 255kg per year. In that time, an average tree produces 15kg to 30kg, so about 10 trees are required to provide oxygen for one person. Trees also humidify and cool the atmosphere by evaporation and transpiration. A wooded area of 50 square metres brings the temperature down by 3.5C and increases the humidity by 50%. Leaf movement, especially in conifers, releases negative ions that are supposed to have beneficial effects on health and mood. And the tree is home to many useful species.
Pascal Cribier, a professional gardener, lives in a flat overlooking the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. He points to the tree tops there. "We only ever see half the tree and can't imagine all the underground activity, the size and strength of the roots, and the many species that live in symbiosis with it. We forget that without trees the earth would deteriorate rapidly and lastingly." It is the secret underground life of trees that led Cribier to his vocation when he was 18. He wanted to understand, to plant and put his hands to the earth.
Now he is also a "garden artist", and exhibits blocks of knotted roots in galleries. In the undergrowth, those roots and the subsoil give life to mushrooms, lichen, ferns, epiphytic plants, insects, worms and mammals. Beneath the ground, the roots circulate tonnes of water for the leaves, and they are often longer than the branches. The Libyan jujube tree is two metres high but has branches 60 metres long. "Man can't live without trees, and yet they are under threat everywhere," warns Hallé. The UN declared 2011 to be the International Year of Forests. Trees are home to 50% of the world's biodiversity, and provide subsistence to 1.6 billion humans.
Surveys by the United Nations collaborative programme on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in developing countries show that half the planet's forests were destroyed in the 20th century. From 2000 to 2005, 7.3m hectares of tropical forest disappeared every year, or 20,000 hectares a day. As a result, tropical deforestation and forest degradation account for between 15% and 20% of CO2 emissions, because trees release carbon when they are burned or felled. The UN believes that tree planting could offset 15% of carbon emissions in the first half of the 21st century.
more at link:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/jan/03/trees-allies-against-climate-c...
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ampersand
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I'm busy enough in my life as we all are, but every spring I plant two dozen trees. It's the thing I most look forward to all year, and the most satisfying thing of all the things I do. It's a joy and an endless legacy.
- 5 months ago
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ampersand
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coolplanet
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ampersand:
That's what it's all about.
I get endless joy nuturing the saplings and watching them grow.
The dawn redwood, the sequoia and the Himalayan birch really blow my mind!
So does black bamboo. - 5 months ago
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coolplanet
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ampersand
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coolplanet:
Black bamboo is beautiful.
I have a small stand of bamboo but conditions are likely too Mediterranean here to do very much with most types of bamboo. There is one amazing thick strain, of the many that you can build with, that seems so perfect for light-weight pillars and exterior water pipes for landscaping.
I do have two types of sequoia I've planted in some shaded creeks.
I hope those that follow me will enjoy those cathedral like redwood groves.
The thing I've most envious about at the moment is the other worldly beauty of honey-colored teak columns I've seen in so many exquisite temples and homes in Thailand.
As I understand it, it's not possible to import un-worked teak from Thailand.
Except in the rarest of cases of course, (for me and thou, naturally,) it's not an admirable or ecological thing to send wood halfway around the world for one's own prosaic uses.
I am going to valiantly try and grow everything here on site that one would use here.
(All the stones in my stone-built home come from the property here.)
The conundrum is of course for some of my planned planting (such as at least one or two cork trees) I doubt that my successors will know what to do with them when they finally arrive at a mature stage of development likely long after I'm gone.
Ah, well. It's a brief ride, but it can be beautiful. - 5 months ago
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ampersand
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coolplanet
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ampersand:
Thanks for such an inspirational report!
We share the same desire. PLANT PLANTS
This year I plan to harvest much maize.
We must keep the genetic diversity alive! - 5 months ago
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coolplanet
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SFirman
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The Willow Tree is a great shade tree. Aspirn can be made from the bark of a Willow Tree. I find them quite beautiful.
- 5 months ago
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SFirman
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circlesquared
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SFirman:
willows have always been a favorite of mine...can't help but think of Tom Bombadil in the Lord Of The Rings
- 5 months ago
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circlesquared
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ampersand
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SFirman:
True that. I'm quite partial to the look of pepper trees I've planted. They grow quickly and have a wonderful silhouette--like the willow, but more sensuously twisted, and they are amazingly aromatic as well.
They look really great after a couple of hundred years. - 5 months ago
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ampersand
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outofbounds
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Love trees! Thanks for posting!
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outofbounds
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Wyley_Wombat
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I've never met a tree that I did not like; can't say the same regarding people.
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Wyley_Wombat
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wally60
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go out to the mountains or the desert away form it all and listen to mother earth
if you cant hear it your not listening .trees are the gift of life just listen to the ents. - 5 months ago
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wally60
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B_N_L
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If people had a better understanding of what a tree does and how it is so beneficial to the life of everything around it, we would value them as the gifts that they are. Life makes our lives possible and prosperous, not gizmos and other human detritus. Humanity as a whole only degrades life which creates instability and weakness. Sadly, humanity is far too dense to recognize their error. Yes, I'm a dirt-worshiping tree-hugger. IMO, we should all be. Trees make our environment comfortable and everything that sustains us is made of dirt, water and air brought together in amazing ways by the energy of the sun.
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B_N_L
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MotherForTruth
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Stop and notice the many miracles of nature.
- 5 months ago
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MotherForTruth
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Anonmaly
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Likes trees.... Hugs them upon occasion, once "borrowed" most of the industrial equipment belonging to a substantial deforestation company (okay I made that last part up, "I" didn't do shit, but hearing about it from the logger later was funny)....
Should have apples this year, started them a few years back and water them very regularly with "brown" or "grey" water (idkwtf stupid terminology), they grow fast....
Still has cedars started YEARS ago....
Planted my first tree at 5....
Is nominating myself for class president.....
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Anonmaly
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coolplanet
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5bndJRaiHA
The Ancient Bristlecone Pines
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coolplanet
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JanforGore
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The Moringa Olifiera is a miracle tree that we should be planting in drought areas all over the world. Its seeds can be used for medicine and food and its leaves can be used to filter water. Women in Ghana, Malawi and other developing nations in Africa are now getting free seedlings to grow moringa trees and it is also lifting them out of poverty. These are the solutions that fill my heart with joy. These are the kinds of initiatives we need to see globally to fight poverty, hunger and pollution. Nature provides for us and we will see that more once we understand the symbiosis between us and the Earth.
http://www.gardenorganic.org.uk/pdfs/international_programme/Moringa.pdf
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JanforGore
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circlesquared
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JanforGore:
great addition Jan, gotta love the tree of life.
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circlesquared
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ampersand
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JanforGore:
I've read about the moringa trees. I couldn't open the link you added but I'd be very happy to try to grow some of these trees. Can you suggest a source for the seeds or seedlings?
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ampersand
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Leen61
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Great post, STC. I like the pics of the trees others have posted. We take trees for granted. But we never should. There is too much deforesting going on as it is.
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Leen61
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SIBob
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Leen61:
Hold on to every tree that you have.
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SIBob
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Leen61
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SIBob:
I agree, SIBob.
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Leen61
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circlesquared
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Leen61:
love all the additions as well Leen...think it's gonna take a change in what we consider "progress" before we will see our forests rebound.
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circlesquared
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Leen61
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circlesquared:
That is the unfortunate truth, STC. Sad to see conservation losing its battle against the corporations.
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Leen61
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kennymotown
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I love trees, I'm very lucky to live in the Pacific Northwest were we have an abundance of trees and rain to make them thrive!
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kennymotown
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SIBob
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kennymotown:
Some day I'll be a travelin' man headed west, (at least in my dreams).
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SIBob
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kennymotown
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SIBob:
Be prepared to be in awe of mother nature! :)
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kennymotown
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circlesquared
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kennymotown:
ahhhh...the forests of Washington state
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circlesquared
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kennymotown
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circlesquared:
And Oregon too! :)
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kennymotown
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circlesquared
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kennymotown:
used to live in Brookings...went for hikes in the Kalmiopsis frequently
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circlesquared
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kennymotown
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circlesquared:
Beautiful country down there, unfortunately I have only been for a day!
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kennymotown
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SIBob
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In Staten Island we have one small sliver of land running through the middle that is called the Greenbelt. They managed to keep the f##king developers away from that, at least. Although we have plenty of trees, and a few nice parks, the old homes seem to be on the endangered list now. The newest thing is to knock one house down and put up a five-unit piece of crap condo, with tar-paper walls.
In this recession many of those "investments" sit empty. But this borough is still the greenest of NYC's five boroughs, (once you look past the closed dump).
http://sibob.org/wordpress/ - 5 months ago
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SIBob
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FreeSpiritMuse
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SIBob:
That's interesting, I've seen similar construction of sub par housing that may as well be made of paper mache'. They won't stand up to any severe weather in this region.
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FreeSpiritMuse
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SIBob
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FreeSpiritMuse:
Planned obsolescence, like everything else being sold.
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SIBob
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Vierotchka
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See more amazing trees, albeit some shaped by man, at http://www.vyperlook.com/odd-strange/weirdest-trees
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Vierotchka
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FreeSpiritMuse
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Vierotchka:
Very graceful, a work of art.
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FreeSpiritMuse
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Vierotchka
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Amazing tree in Yemen
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Vierotchka
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Vierotchka
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Hopefully, this image will be less fuzzy.
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Vierotchka
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KB723
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Vierotchka:
Much Better Vierotchka... =)
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KB723
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KB723
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Cool!!! I was really Digging these on Oahu... =)
Norfolk Pine Tree on Waimanalo Oahu Christmas Tree
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KB723
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FreeSpiritMuse
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Another incredible tangle of roots can be found at Lake Camecuaro, Mexico, in Michoacan area - these are massive cypress trees standing in water:
- 5 months ago
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FreeSpiritMuse
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circlesquared
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FreeSpiritMuse:
gorgeous
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circlesquared
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FreeSpiritMuse
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Baobab Avenue, near Morondava, in Madagascar:
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FreeSpiritMuse
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circlesquared
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FreeSpiritMuse:
love those
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circlesquared
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FreeSpiritMuse
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circlesquared:
Great topic you chose. I love trees and I'm not ashamed to say I've hugged a few.
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FreeSpiritMuse
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circlesquared
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just saw the banyan trees gifted to Ringling by Edison...like cathedrals of life
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circlesquared
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circlesquared
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plane tree
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circlesquared
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FreeSpiritMuse
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circlesquared:
Magnificent.
"If a man walks in the woods for love of them half of each day, he is in danger of being regarded as a loafer. But if he spends his days as a speculator, shearing off those woods and making the earth bald before her time, he is deemed an industrious and enterprising citizen.: ~Henry David Thoreau
- 5 months ago
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FreeSpiritMuse
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circlesquared
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many of us know these things, but this is a beautiful article about how we look at our environment. Do you see the whole tree and everything it is connected to as having value? or do you see the tree in it's separate pieces and only find value in it's deconstruction and reuse? When you see the whole value of a living thing it becomes very hard for a thinking individual to destroy it's potential for selfish gain.
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circlesquared
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circlesquared
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circlesquared:
reminds me of Shel Silverstein's "The Giving Tree"
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circlesquared
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attilatheblond
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circlesquared:
When my daughter was young, that book was the gift I most often went for when she was invited to a birthday party. The Giving Tree and those wonderful 'Value tale' biographies for young children.
Glad to say, one of those little girls from so long ago still stays in touch with me. She does work to protect the environment. And she recently became a mother. The Giving Tree probably helps another generation.
Plant trees. Where ever you go, plant trees. And have some youngster along for the fun.
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attilatheblond
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artemis6
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attilatheblond:
Shel Silverstein has shared a tremendous love of life with so many . My respect for him is very great .
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artemis6
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artemis6:
you are so right...he has my respect and gratitude as well
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