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15 votes
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Sweden has vast old growth forests – but they are being chopped down faster than the Amazon
29 votes -
Hidden giants: how the UK’s 500,000 redwoods put California in the shade
25 votes -
How the UN is holding back the Sahara desert
8 votes -
Attempts to plant new Joshua Trees after destructive fires assisted by load carrying camels
16 votes -
So, you want to plant some trees
9 votes -
A tree a minute: One man planting 1440 trees in a day
7 votes -
Genetic engineering was meant to save chestnut trees. Then there was a mistake.
23 votes -
Great Scot! My biggest Bonsai yet
5 votes -
Stop planting trees, says guy who inspired world to plant a trillion trees
27 votes -
'Signs of life': Sycamore Gap tree will live on, experts say
34 votes -
London's traditional Christmas tree has been felled in Norway ahead of its trip to Trafalgar Square
11 votes -
Our search for Scotland's lost highland trees
8 votes -
Two men arrested in an investigation into a famous tree that was felled near Hadrian's Wall in England
26 votes -
Places to bask in spectacular foliage this fall
13 votes -
Boy, 16, arrested after felling of famous 300 year old Sycamore Gap tree at Hadrian’s Wall
59 votes -
A revelation about trees is messing with climate calculations
21 votes -
The trees on Xenia Street
6 votes -
The robots are coming ― to pick Northwest apples
10 votes -
Using LiDAR to map tree shadows
11 votes -
Hunting the extraordinary nipa palm fruit (and the strange ways that you eat it) | Weird Fruit Explorer
4 votes -
Iceland is a strange place to plant trees, but for us it is one of the most logical places to try and bring back forests
7 votes -
Making a Christmas tree Bonsai
4 votes -
As demand for electric vehicles soars, Stora Enso in Finland has hired engineers to look into the possibility of using lignin, a polymer found in trees, to make batteries
6 votes -
A wild Juniper tree (Yamadori) becomes a Bonsai
8 votes -
In accordance with annual tradition, a Norwegian Christmas tree has arrived in Trafalgar Square, London – this year marks the 75th anniversary
4 votes -
How a volcanic eruption and a mysterious phenomenon known as a mast year were perfectly timed together to create a new forest in Iceland
4 votes -
Iceland is bringing back the forests razed by Vikings – recent data shows tree-cultivating efforts are paying off
9 votes -
Occlusion Grotesque. An experimental, organic typeface
27 votes -
The Vikings cut them down, we want to bring them back – bringing back the ancient forests of Iceland
3 votes -
Why Sandalwood is so expensive | So Expensive
5 votes -
These seed-firing drones can plant 40,000 trees every day
11 votes -
Are we at war with Norway? – Brits mock sad gifted Trafalgar Square Christmas tree
8 votes -
Clear-cutting has become a political issue after the EU said the technique should be approached with caution, and called for Sweden to protect more of its forests
2 votes -
'Forest gardens’ show how Native land stewardship can outdo nature
12 votes -
Do your lime trees produce much fruit?
2 years ago we planted a lime tree in our backyard. It was already about 5-6 feet tall when we planted it. There's a lemon tree next to it that is probably 50 years old and produces more fruit...
2 years ago we planted a lime tree in our backyard. It was already about 5-6 feet tall when we planted it. There's a lemon tree next to it that is probably 50 years old and produces more fruit than we can use. We're constantly giving away lemons to our friends and neighbors, baking stuff with the ones we keep and we still too many left! But our lime tree barely produces anything. The first year it produced 3 limes, all of which were hard and almost juiceless. This year, so far it has produced a single fruit which doesn't yet look ripe. The thing is that it produces tons of buds that look like they're going to become limes, but they either die or are eaten by squirrels, I guess. I've heard a similar story from a coworker about her lime tree. Is there any secret to getting a lime tree to produce fruit?
10 votes -
You can sell the trees you don’t cut
5 votes -
Forests cover 70% of Sweden, but many argue the model of replacing old-growth forests with monoculture plantations is bad for biodiversity
13 votes -
There are signs the world might be running out of natural rubber. Disease, climate change and plunging global prices have put the world's rubber supplies into jeopardy.
4 votes -
The demise and potential revival of the American chestnut
4 votes -
More trees do not always create a cooler planet (and in some places deforestation cools more)
4 votes -
In America, Christmas trees are a multibillion-dollar business. But who’s making the money?
12 votes -
The social life of forests: Trees appear to communicate and cooperate through subterranean networks of fungi. What are they sharing with one another?
5 votes -
Why Nova Scotia sends Boston a tree every year
@Canadian Forces in 🇺🇸: This tree from Nova Scotia is now in Boston Common.The Nova Scotians send one every year.Why? pic.twitter.com/T0iCbPoEh5
14 votes -
Following a two-year-long hiatus, an initiative by Copenhagen Municipality allowing citizens to get trees for free, has returned
7 votes -
Norway funds satellite map of world's tropical forests – funding for the project comes through its International Climate and Forests Initiative (NICFI)
8 votes -
The tree that could help stop the pandemic: The rare Chilean soapbark tree produces compounds that can boost the body's reaction to vaccines
7 votes -
How to make biomass energy sustainable again: Coppicing, pollarding, and hedgerows
14 votes -
2,000-year-old redwoods survive wildfire at California's oldest state park
8 votes -
Living tree bridges in a land of clouds – photos
5 votes