Friday, April 27, 2012

Lone Tree Police Arrest 2 Men In Connection With Attempted ...

LONE TREE, Colo. (CBS4)- Police in Lone Tree arrested two men in connection with a possible attempted abduction.

An 11-year-old girl said she was approached by a white van while riding her bike Thursday at the intersection of Heritage Hills Parkway and South Shadow Circle.

She told police the passenger in that van tried to grab her.

Police arrested Monte Greenwald and Raymond Desrosiers Friday evening. Officers said the pair was working at a home in the area.

Mug shots for Greenwald and Desrosiers have not been released.

Arbor Day 2012: A California Tree Tour Of Our Best, Brightest And ...

Happy Arbor Day 2012! Plant a tree! Hug a tree! Love a tree!

This eco-tastic holiday was founded in Nebraska in 1872 by J. Sterling Morton, an editor who wrote racist, pro-slavery editorials (!) but was fascinated by trees. His son, Joy Morton, founded the Morton Salt Company in Chicago in 1885.

Despite the questionable politics of its founder, Arbor Day has become a day for individuals around the world, in over 30 countries, to plant and care for trees. Here in California, we have both some of the world's most breathtaking trees and some of the strangest trees.

From Dr. Seuss-esque Joshua Trees to purple gum-drop Jacarandas, "arbor-sculpted" Circus Trees to Giant Sequoias big enough to drive a car through, California's trees, just like its people, sure are colorful and diverse. Get outside and appreciate the trees that are a life source around you.

For inspiration, click through photos of some of California's most amazing trees:
All photos courtesy of Alamy.

"The oldest living tree in the world is a White Mountains, California, bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva) named Methuselah, after the Biblical figure who lived to 969 years old. The Methuselah tree, found at 11,000 feet above sea level, is 4,838 years old - it is not only the oldest tree but also the oldest living non-clonal organism in the world." --Neotorama
"The oldest living tree in the world is a White Mountains, California, bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva) named Methuselah, after the Biblical figure who lived to 969 years old. The Methuselah tree, found at 11,000 feet above sea level, is 4,838 years old - it is not only the oldest tree but also the oldest living non-clonal organism in the world." --Neotorama
"The oldest living tree in the world is a White Mountains, California, bristlecone pine (Pinus longaeva) named Methuselah, after the Biblical figure who lived to 969 years old. The Methuselah tree, found at 11,000 feet above sea level, is 4,838 years old - it is not only the oldest tree but also the oldest living non-clonal organism in the world." --Neotorama
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Plant a Tree in Haiti for Arbor Day by Taking This Facebook Quiz

In celebration of Arbor Day, you can plant a tree in Haiti simply by taking a quiz on Facebook.

Clothing retailer Timberland is encouraging people to celebrate Arbor Day today with the re-launch of its “Hortiscope” quiz on Facebook. Discover your inner tree-personality with a few clicks. For every completed Hortiscope quiz through Dec. 31, 2012, Timberland will plant a real tree in Haiti — up to 100,000 trees.

The company plants the types of trees listed in the quiz for the agroforestry program in Haiti. The program has planted 1.4 million trees to date. In 2010, Timberland started a tree nursery and training program in Haiti, where less than 2% of the country’s original forests remain as a result of unsustainable land use practices and a continuing dependence on tree wood and charcoal for cooking and heating needs. The company’s goal is to plant 5 million trees by 2015.

Check out Timberland’s tree farm in Haiti:

Also, some interesting Arbor Day info: Did you know 73% of Americans don’t know when Arbor Day is? And only 12% celebrate the holiday? That is, according to a survey commissioned by Timberland and conducted by ORC International between March 20 and April 1, 2012, among a sample of 1,026 adults comprising 517 men and 509 women 18 years of age and older.

If you took the Hortiscope quiz, tell us for kicks — what type of tree are you? Also, do you typically celebrate Arbor Day? Sound off in the comments.

Photo courtesy of iStockphoto, konradlew

Joshua Tree, Retrofied – Intelligent Travel

By Monica Corcoran, senior photo editor at NationalGeographic.com.

It’s funny how your mind can change after you’ve tried something for the first time. I was convinced that Hipstamatic – an iPhone app that let’s you apply film, lens, and flash settings to your pics to achieve a retro look – was more gimmick than photography. So last month, on an early spring trip to Joshua Tree National Park, I decided to put it to the test, armed with an Old Glory camera case, the Americana lens and an “endless supply” of Ina’s 1969 film. It seemed like a fitting kit for my first encounter with this iconic desert, or more appropriately, deserts. The park is comprised of not one, but two deserts: the Mojave “high desert,” and the Colorado “low desert.”

A courtyard chandelier at the Joshua Tree Inn.

In less than two hours, you can go from sitting in L.A. traffic to sitting at the Crossroads Café in Joshua Tree savoring a plate of cheesy, stick-to-your-ribs potatoes and a cup of coffee. This is key because it’s best to go into the desert fully satiated (buying some extra water and other supplies doesn’t hurt either). After a quick stop at the visitor center to get my National Park Passport stamped, it wasn’t long before I saw the namesake and star of the show, the Joshua Tree.

I happened to time my trip perfectly and was rewarded with blooming trees, creosote bushes, ocotillo plants, and patches of other wildflowers. The desert was spectacular and the rock formations otherworldly. I didn’t see coyotes or roadrunners, but a curious iridescent green hummingbird made up for the no-shows. After several hours of bouldering and hiking, it was time to leave the park and check in to my hotel before heading to dinner.

Pappy & Harriet’s Pioneertown Palace looks the part.

The Joshua Tree Inn (just six miles from the park’s west entrance) offers hacienda-style lodging centered around a courtyard garden and pool. A few more miles down the road, I found Pappy & Harriet’s Pioneertown Palace, an authentic steak house that grills over an outdoor mesquite fire, features live music most nights and serves up margaritas in a mason jar. By the time I got back to the inn and was gazing up at the starry sky on my private patio (and making s’mores in a chiminea they kindly provided), Joshua Tree had shot straight to the top of my all time favorite trips list.

And while a no-app, no-filter photo straight from the camera is still my favorite, Hipstamatic will show you (and your friends) a heckuva good time.

Don’t forget: National Park Week is still in full effect through Sunday, April 29, with all parks offering free admission to celebrate the occasion. Share your own photos with the National Geographic community by tagging them #parkpic on Twitter and Instagram.

To learn more about our amazing national park system download National Geographic’s free app for iPhone, National Parks by National Geographic.

Arbor Day 2012: 9 Sexiest Trees We Could Find (PHOTOS)

It's Arbor Day, folks, so in honor of all you tree huggers out there, here are nine of the sexiest photos of trees we could find on Flickr.

Why?

Because nature is beautiful and extremely suggestive, that's why.

  • Sultry Tree

    Those smooth lines lend an air of romanticism to this walk in the woods. Also, upside down it looks like a butt.

  • Curvy Tree

    Flaunt it if you got it.

  • Hanky Panky Trees

    Something's going on here, we're just not sure what.

  • Boob Tree

    This tree could win a wet t-shirt contest.

  • Bottom Tree

    This tree's got a little junk in the trunk... heyo!

  • Microstrobilus

    You can't spell microstrobilus without the letter S, which stands for sexy.

  • Orgy Tree

    There's a party in the woods and everyone's invited.

  • Um...

    We'll just leave this one up to your imagination.

  • Penis Tree

    You know what they say about trees with large leaves...

  • Also On Huffington Post

    Bette Midler celebrates Arbor Day.

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Arbor Day Tree - Triangular Tree For Arbor Day | Design Happens

It’s Arbor Day, and if that’s not enough to motivate you to plant and care for trees, take a look at these incredible shots by photographer Marianne Kjølner. This tree in Denmark has grown into the shape of the house it’s near — she believes because the landscape is so windy that the house shelters the tree from the elements.

tree house front

Breathtaking, isn’t it? The tree almost mimics creeping ivy on a façade. Kjølner says that no people were involved in shaping the tree, only the forces of nature. A totally natural topiary! Someone call Ripley’s Believe It or Not!

[Via: PinterestColossal]

Multilevel Binary Affiliate Tree (MLM) | drupal.org

mlm.jpg

This module implements a Binary Multilevel Marketing (MLM) algorithm that allows users to register under another user using a special affiliate url, users who register under a specific user are assigned to this user's tree.

This module uses a Binary MLM algorithm in assigning users, it can store up to 7 levels in each user's tree.

The module provides a block which lists the logged in user's tree and allows him to navigate further down the tree by clicking on any user under him to see his tree

The module provides a search by username functionality so users can easily navigate to another user's tree

This module can be further updated to include e-commerce integration and commission calculation and distribution

Project Information

Downloads


Bear Falls From Tree After Tranquilized On University Of Colorado ...

A black bear was tranquilized after it wandered onto the University of Colorado campus in Boulder.

The 200-pound animal was spotted near university housing on April 26. One woman said it brushed past her as she was putting money into a parking meter.

SCROLL DOWN FOR PHOTOS

"It was like, 'Excuse me, pardon me, coming through.' It was running full speed," Rhonda Chestnutt told the Denver Post.

After about two hours, wildlife officials were able to tranquilize the animal, which had positioned itself atop a tree.

CU Independent photographer Andy Duann captured the astonishing images of the bear falling from the brush onto a pad that workers had positioned beneath the tree to ensure the animal had a soft landing spot.

A representative for Colorado Parks and Wildlife said the bear will be released back into the wild, The Denver Channel reported.

The black bear was not the first wild animal to wander its way onto the college campus this school year.

In October, officials had to tranquilize a mountain lion that was spotted near student dorms, according to the CU Independent.

Born Free USA has suggested that "As human development progressively encroaches on wildlife habitat, conflicts between wildlife and people increase."

A bear that wandered into the CU-Boulder dorm complex Williams Village falls from a tree after being tranquilized by Colorado Wildlife officials around 10:30 a.m. CU Police Spokesman Ryan Huff said the bear was likely 1-3 years old and weighed somewhere between 150-200 pounds. (Andu Duann, CU Independent)
A bear that wandered into the CU-Boulder dorm complex Williams Village falls from a tree after being tranquilized by Colorado Wildlife officials around 10:30 a.m. CU Police Spokesman Ryan Huff said the bear was likely 1-3 years old and weighed somewhere between 150-200 pounds. (Andu Duann, CU Independent)
A bear that wandered into the CU-Boulder dorm complex Williams Village falls from a tree after being tranquilized by Colorado Wildlife officials around 10:30 a.m. CU Police Spokesman Ryan Huff said the bear was likely 1-3 years old and weighed somewhere between 150-200 pounds. (Andu Duann, CU Independent)
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Sophia Bush Talks Life After 'One Tree Hill' | Sophia Bush : Just Jared

Sophia Bush Talks Life After 'One Tree Hill'

Sophia Bush rocks a pair of leather pants with a bright green clutch at Chateau Marmont on Thursday (April 26) in West Hollywood, Calif.

The 29-year-old actress recently chatted with OK! about life after One Tree Hill.

“It’s been interesting. I miss seeing our camera operators and our wardrobe department and the grips everyday, but I missed being home so much! It’s so wonderful to be there,” Sophia shared.

“And I thought I was going to have all this down time … and I’ve never been busier in my life!” she added. “I haven’t had the down time I’m looking for yet, but I feel great, I feel incredibly fulfilled, I’m happier than I’ve ever been!”

Like Just Jared on Facebook

Tree Restrictions

Vince has been real busy planting trees and didn’t want to have to plant any other trees right now but he loves persimmons and I thought it would be nice to see if I could find him a persimmon tree.  We both love sugar pears and there was a tree in MO where we could pick as many sugar pears as we wanted.  Here, we found some at Sam’s Club but buying them already picked is nothing like going out and picking your own.  I’ve told my dad about the sugar pears and he had never had them but he’s been searching for a sugar pear tree.  Then I started searching for them and couldn’t find them.  I looked at the label on the box of sugar pears we bought at Sam’s to see if it had any other name and it didn’t . . just sugar pears.

While looking online for persimmon trees, which were already sold out or it was too late to ship them to our area, I came across this . . “also called sugar or candy pears”!  How could I pass that up?  Since we already had a full size pear tree, I ordered two dwarf sugar pears.  That way, if I need to net them to keep the birds off them, it will be easier.

I didn’t mention that I’d ordered two more fruit trees (and a cherry tree) til they arrived.  Vince opened the box and said “What the heck??”

Out came the tools — two wheel barrows . . why two?  The big tiller, the little tiller . .

That man of mine knows how to plant a tree!

He’s so proud of himself for thinking of using that little tiller to grind up the dirt.  By the time he’s done with it, it’s about the texture of baby powder!

Now we just have to patiently wait til we can walk right out in our yard and pick figs, peaches, pears, pomegranates and cherries and I think I’ll be in big trouble if I bring home any more trees for Vince to plant . . at least for a while.

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366 Random Acts of Kindness: Day 118: Planted A Memory Tree


 Here in the United States, today is Arbor Day.  Arbor Day is a national holiday in which people are encouraged to plant or care for trees as a way to improve the environment.  All around the country (and on other dates, around the world), people take the opportunity to make a positive change by joining groups committed to planting or replanting different types of trees.  Another tradition made possible by the National Arbor Day Foundation, is the ability to plant trees in national forests in honor or remembrance of someone. 

My wife grew up in Los Gatos, California in a house nestled in the Santa Cruz Mountains.  The Santa Cruz Mountains are a sprawling forest home to enormous Redwood trees, lush moss, and wildlife like mule deer, foxes, and bobcats (the mountains are also home to the winery where I proposed to my Lindsey).  Once my wife and her brothers moved away from home, my in-laws moved to Corvallis, Montana which is a cozy little community nestled between the Sapphire and Bitterroot Mountains.  It is everything you imagine when thinking about the most serene, natural place possible.  From spending time with my wife's family, I know how much they love both of these places, and how much they love nature overall (my father-in-law especially did).  So today, for my random act of kindness, I am "planting" 10 native pine, fir, and cedar trees in memory of my father-in-law, John Bascom, in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest in California.  If you would like to plant a tree in someone's honor, you can at the National Arbor Day website

Tranquilized Bear Falls Safely From Tree [Video]

UC Tranquilized BearAndy Duann of the CU Independent snapped a truly unforgettable and mesmerizing photograph of a tranquilized bear falling safely from a tree.  The incident was also captured on video, which you can find below.

The photo opportunity presented itself after a young bear, weighing between 150 and 200 pounds, wandered onto the University of Colorado at Boulder campus and proceeded to climb a tree.  At which point, the local authorities were called in and managed to tranquilize the lost bear, who then plummeted from the tree onto some mats which adequately absorbed the impact of the quick descent.

Prior to being tranquilized, the young bear managed to catch roughly two hours of relaxation time in a tree within close proximity to campus dorms.

The mats used to cushion the bear’s fall were provided by the university’s Recreation Center.

CU Police Department spokesman Ryan Huff was quoted by the CU Independent having said:

“[The bear] was tranquilized by the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Department and it fell onto some mats that the Rec Center provided.  It is now in a cage and it will be relocated at a higher elevation.”

The bear was spotted wandering around Williams Village.  CU Police department spokesperson Ryan Huff indicated that CUPD received a call on Thursday morning around 8 a.m. regarding a bear wandering around the Will Vill area, CU Independent reports.

Bears wandering into populated is certainly not unheard of as Y! News reported that a family of black bears wandered onto the set of a Pennsylvania news station on Tuesday.

Bear Tranquilized Video:

Three dead after car hits tree and rips apart - The Local

Published: 27 Apr 12 08:40 CET
Online: http://www.thelocal.de/national/20120427-42207.html

A 30-year-old and two others were killed in a car crash on Thursday evening in western Germany, after the driver lost control and hit a tree head-on.

The car, an old Opel, was ripped into three pieces when it smashed into a tree around 300 metres away from the road. At least two of the three passengers died instantly, local newspaper Stimberg Zeitung reported on Friday.

The group were travelling from the North Rhine-Westphalian town of Recklinghausen in the direction of Datteln when, at around 8:30 pm the accident occurred. |Why the 30-year-old driver lost control of the vehicle remains unclear, police told the paper.

No other vehicles were involve, but the road has been shut off so investigators examine the mangled pieces of the car and the debris can be removed.

According to Stimberg Zeitung a helicopter used to search the surrounding areas to check that more bodies had not been flung further away.

Police are yet to confirm the identities of the victims, but told Bild daily newspaper that “they died at the scene of the accident” and that “the car is completely destroyed.”

The Local/jcw

Tree City USA awards presented to area cities | Missouri ...

Published on: Apr. 26, 2012

KANSAS CITY, MO -- Trees provide shade, boost air quality, give us building materials, shelter wildlife and help keep America beautiful, which is why trees are celebrated on National Arbor Day, April 27.

While dates for local Arbor Day celebrations and ceremonies vary among communities and states, the common theme is that trees increase the quality of life for people. When people and cities take good care of trees in yards, rights of way, parks and forests, the benefits increase even further.

Several cities in the Kansas City and St. Joseph regions have been recognized with Tree City USA designations by the National Arbor Day Foundation. Qualifying cities must have an active, well-funded tree maintenance program and designated staffers to carry out the programs.

Cities in the Kansas City region earning the designation include: Belton, Blue Springs, Clinton, Gladstone, Independence, Kansas City, Kearney, Lee’s Summit, Liberty, North Kansas City, Raytown, Sedalia and Warrensburg. Liberty was also additionally honored for growth in its tree care programs.

In the St. Joseph region, recipients include: Chillicothe, Maryville, Plattsburg, Savannah and Trenton.

Arbor Day is always a good time to plant a tree. The Heartland Tree Alliance provides information about urban trees for the Kansas City area at heartlandtreealliance.org/. For extensive information about trees from backyard plantings to forest management, go to mdc.mo.gov and search "trees."

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Bear Falling from a Tree | Slog

Falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling, falling forever...

Charlottesville Tomorrow News Center: City's tree commission to ...

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DailyProgressBy Sean Tubbs
Charlottesville Tomorrow
Thursday, April 26, 2012

Charlottesville’s tree community will celebrate Arbor Day in Forest Hills Park on Friday by gathering around one of the city’s most majestic trees.
White-oak
The age of this tree in Forest Hills Park is unknown, but the Charlottesville Area Tree Stewards consider it to be a landmark (Source: Daily Progress)
“It’s a beautiful white oak and it’s obviously very old,” said Tim Hughes, the city’s arborist.
Members of the Charlottesville Tree Commission will place a plaque near the tree at a 10 a.m. ceremony to commemorate its status as a landmark tree.
“We think it’s very important as our city celebrates its 250th birthday to bring greater attention to our very special landmark trees,” said Elizabeth “Bitsy” Waters, a former mayor and chairwoman of the tree commission.

The nine-member tree commission was created in late 2010 to oversee management of the city’s urban forests.

“We’ve learned that we already do a lot to preserve and plant trees in Charlottesville, but there are many opportunities to do more,” Waters said. “We look forward to identifying places that will benefit most from having additional trees, including corridors and neighborhoods with limited tree canopy.”

A study in 2009 indicated that the city has a tree canopy that covers 47 percent of Charlottesville’s 10.4 square miles. That helped the city obtain a “growth award” from the Arbor Day Foundation in 2010.

“The American Forestry Association is looking for tree canopies higher than 40 percent on the East Coast,” said Doug Ehman, manager of the city’s parks division. “The big thing is, though, you have to maintain that and actively manage that canopy.”

To do that, the city employs Hughes to inspect trees on city land, answer questions from the public and implement the urban forestry management plan. That includes planting and tree work such as pruning and removal. 

The city allocated $48,925 for urban tree preservation and planting in the fiscal year 2013 capital improvement program. The city’s operating budget allots more than $200,000 annually for tree maintenance.
One of the trees Hughes has inspected is the white oak that will be commemorated Friday. The tree’s root system was damaged when the parks department renovated Forest Hills Park in 2009.

“The tree is showing classic symptoms of some root damage, but it made it through last summer,” Hughes said. “It has leafed out this year except where you see the dieback.”

Hughes said a tree can take up to eight years to recover from construction damage, depending on the amount of roots that were lost and how much rain has fallen.

“Trees are like people,” Ehman said. “They get old and die. When the tree gets to a point where it’s no longer structurally safe, we have to 

deal with it and put replacements in.”

No one contacted knew how old the Forest Hills white oak is, but Hughes said it could be well over 150 years old.

Another step in management is to ensure diversity among the city’s tree population.

“A monoculture is always an issue,” Hughes said. “If there is a problem in one of those trees, such as a certain insect that likes that tree …

it’s very likely it’s going to create a problem for all those trees.”

For instance, insects and disease have largely eliminated American elms and chestnuts over the past several decades.

Hughes and other arborists in Virginia are bracing for an onslaught of the ash borer, which could destroy ash trees. So far, none of the insects has been reported in the area.

“Sooner or later it is going to be here,” Ehman said.

Hughes’ scope as city arborist is limited to trees on public lands, and not on private property.

If someone wants to develop private property by-right, the city has no authority to stop trees from being removed. However, if they need a rezoning or a special-use permit, the city Planning Commission and the City Council can put conditions on tree replacement.

One member of the tree commission recently tried another strategy.

Robin Hanes was arrested in early April while trying to save a Norway spruce from being felled on private property in the Woolen Mills neighborhood. The tree was removed because the property owner was told it would not survive construction of a house on the currently vacant lot.

Hanes declined to comment on the incident, but said she would issue a statement after her May 22 court hearing.

The city is also served by the Charlottesville Area Tree Stewards, a group of volunteers founded in 2008 that seeks to educate the public about the value of trees. Group members will spend Arbor Day planting trees in the Fifeville neighborhood.

In the fall, the tree commission will organize a massive tree-planting throughout Charlottesville in collaboration with the parks and recreation department.

“Fall is the best time to plant public and private trees,” Waters said.

Waters briefed city councilors on the status of the tree commission earlier this month. Many councilors said they were pleased with the commission’s efforts to date.

“What really pleases me is that this idea of preservation is now becoming institutionalized in our community,” Mayor Satyendra Huja said. “

That is a very healthy thing in my mind.”

Virginia Tech Stadium Woods group to name tree after Stephen ...

A group supporting the saving of an old growth section of forest at Virginia Tech, plans to try to enlist help from a well known late-night comedian.

The Environmental Coalition plans to name one of the old oak trees in the Stadium Woods section, after Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert, host of the "Colbert Report."  The group plans to ceremonial name the tree "The Quercus Omnipotens Colberticus, The Almighty Colbert Oak."

According to an events page on Facebook, the tree naming ceremony is set for next Tuesday, May 1st, at 4:00 p.m. at the Washington Street tennis courts.

Virginia Tech is considering a plan that would use part of the Stadium Woods area, for a new athletics practice facility.

WSLS's Tim Ciesco reported on the controversy surrounding the plan this past Sunday.  Read more by clicking here.

Britain's Prince Edward Visits Philadelphia To Plant Tree at Girard ...

(Britain's Prince Edward chats with local dignitaries on the campus of Girard College. Credit: Cherri Gregg)

(Britain’s Prince Edward chats with local dignitaries on the campus of Girard College. Credit: Cherri Gregg)

By Cherri Gregg

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Philadelphia received a visit from British royalty today.

Prince Edward, the youngest son of Queen Elizabeth II and seventh in line to the throne, visited Girard College this afternoon to plant a tree in honor of his mother’s 60th year as queen.

He arrived in a truly royal fashion, with full escort, and greeted by hundreds of Girard College students of all ages.

“Thank you very much indeed, to all the students and staff of Girard College for making me feel very welcome here,” said his royal highness.

The students were excited that they had royalty on campus.

“I loved the accent!” one young woman said.

Edward, the Earl of Wessex, is chairman of the International Council of the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award International Association, a youth development program that operates in 132 countries.  The program launched in Philadelphia three years ago and now mentors 75 young people in the area, ages 14 to 25.

“Our program is really focused on the individual,” says Leslie Kase, who directs the program in Philadelphia, “and the individual chooses what area of interest they have in terms of skills and physicial recreation and outdoor camping.  It’s all followed by outdoor camping, which is a highlight of the experience.”

Mayor Michael Nutter greeted Edward, stating that the visit was historic for Philadelphia.  His royal highness and hizzoner planted a tree on the Girard campus.

King Edward VIII, the prince’s great-great-grandfather, also planted a tree on the campus in 1860, to mark the kingdom’s relationship with the City of Brotherly Love.

Michigan's State Tree: White Pine (pinus strobus) « Michigan in ...

April 26, 2012

13/52

13/52, photo by Wenström

This week is Arbor Week, a week dedicated to celebrating and planting trees. One tree for Michiganders to celebrate is the eastern White Pine (pinus strobus), which was adopted as our official State Tree by Act 7 on March 4, 1955. Here’s an edited summary of what I’ve learned about white pines.

The eastern white pine, is also known as “soft pine.” It was called the Tree of Peace by the Iroquois and in Ojibway, Zhingwaak. Mature white pines can easily live 200+ years of age, with some Michigan trees that have approached 500 years in age. The eastern white pine has the distinction of being the tallest tree in eastern North America, and pre-colonial stands were reported over 200′ in height.

It was said that when settlers arrived, a squirrel could travel in the forest canopy from one side of the state to the other. With this amazing resource, Michigan led the nation in lumber production in the 1880s and 1890s, and by the early 1900s, over 100 million of Michigan pine trees worth more than all the gold mined in California had been felled in the Lower Peninsula. Most of that value was in white pine, an when the forest was depleted, timber companies moved to the UP.

Small white pines are popular as Christmas trees due to their ability to hold needles, while large white pines were prized as ship masts and known as mast pines by the British navy. These trees were marked with a broad arrow by agents of the crown, a very controversial action that was one of the factors leading to the Revolutionary War. The original masts on the USS Constitution (aka Old Ironsides) were single trees before they realized that laminated trees were better about to withstand cannon fire.

More about the White Pine in Michigan

Scott writes that this mighty 200+ year old White Pine was spared the lumberjacks axe, but he’s glad to have this remnant of the forest that once covered Upper Michigan standing sentinel in the forest surrounding his cabin. Check it out bigger and in his Fisheye slideshow. More of Scott’s work on his Facebook.

Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011 | Pixel 77

I’ve prepared for you guys today a special kind of treat: ten hand-picked vector tree illustrations with the most ingenious and intriguing designs. I thought it would make an interesting showcase from the year that’s passed. Also, a selection of themed vector illustrations can always come in hand to a designer, beginner or otherwise. Let’s take a look at these unusual vector tree illustrations and get inspired for great design projects, no matter the season.

Vector tree 1 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 2 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 4 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 7 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 8 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 9 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 6 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 10 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 5 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 3 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Common elements such as a vector tree are always a useful design resource for those working in the business. And instead of creating your own every time you need one, you can resort to the help of professionals who offer quality vector illustrations. This being said, here are also five vector packs which will surely prove useful:

Vector tree 11 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 12 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 13 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 15 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Vector tree 14 Top 10 Most Vivacious Vector Tree Illustrations from 2011

Which of these unique tree illustrations do you like the most? And if you had to create one yourself, what elements would you use to construct it?

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