News
Stuart Ian Frost’s “Dancing Trees,” a sturdy column of 23 lodgepole pines, averaging around 13 feet tall, appears to be solid but subtly shifts and swoons.
When I was younger and someone would ask me if I could be anything what would I be, the first thing that'd cross my mind was that I'd never be ...
Hosted on MSN2mon
If A Tree Does Not Know How to Dance, The Wind Will Teach ItThe metaphor, "If a tree does not know how to dance, the wind will teach it," beautifully captures the essence of how life shapes us. It is a profound statement about the nature of transformation ...
Monica Sandreczki Frogs, trillium and the wind in the trees on a slow hike through an Ontario forest. Photos: Monica Sandreczki. It's different hiking in eastern Ontario than it is in the Adirondacks.
Make your garden dance in the wind with these airy plants By Brandi Keller , Correspondent Updated May 16, 2022 11:08 a.m. The plumes of Gulf muhly grass add color to the fall garden.
Updated noon Jan. 5: Reports this morning indicate the Davis campus lost two trees in last night’s storm — a hackberry on the north side of Wickson Hall and a locust on the north side of Hoagland Hall ...
In light winds, the trees swayed at around 2 to 2.3 cycles per second, with their branches absorbing much of the wind energy, protecting the trunks and roots from wind stress.
However, even the strongest trees are not immune to severe winds at a certain strength. “We have seen trees that were in perfect condition just catch the wrong wind and blow over,” Boyer admitted.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results