Yep. Right now I doing the unusual thing: browsing the photos chronologically, choosing a photo, searching for a quote.
Usually it’s the other way round.
Or not.
Perhaps it’s 50/50.
Ah, I don’t know.
It’s an interesting part of the Nationalpark Luberon. Someone wanted to prove that cedars can thrive in Luberon and imported seeds from the cedars of the Atlas mountain range in Algeria in 1861.
Our woods that look similar—maybe especially look similar in pictures—are predominantly hemlock. A tree expert would know the difference right away, but the look of the forest is much the same.
Yes, hemlock and spruce, along with several kinds of pine, make up most of the conifer forest around here. There’s also lots of hardwood: oak, ash, birch, dogwood, hickory. Walnut and elm have almost disappeared.
Looks like a Foret des Cedres moment:~))
Yep. Right now I doing the unusual thing: browsing the photos chronologically, choosing a photo, searching for a quote.
Usually it’s the other way round.
Or not.
Perhaps it’s 50/50.
Ah, I don’t know.
Looks like the woods in western Connecticut. This could be a path at Steep Rock Reservation.
It’s an interesting part of the Nationalpark Luberon. Someone wanted to prove that cedars can thrive in Luberon and imported seeds from the cedars of the Atlas mountain range in Algeria in 1861.
French wikipedia article here
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/For%C3%AAt_des_c%C3%A8dres_du_Luberon
Our woods that look similar—maybe especially look similar in pictures—are predominantly hemlock. A tree expert would know the difference right away, but the look of the forest is much the same.
Hm, these
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsuga
?
Sort of a pine … it seems. Not known in Europe.
This is the Altas Cedar
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cedrus_atlantica
Yes, hemlock and spruce, along with several kinds of pine, make up most of the conifer forest around here. There’s also lots of hardwood: oak, ash, birch, dogwood, hickory. Walnut and elm have almost disappeared.