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Showing posts with the label trees

Fire and Trees

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I wrote a trees vs. fire piece the East Bay Express published two weeks ago . It appears to be affecting others' fire reportage in the region . Here's the S.F. Chronicle today, with more specificity of what burned and what didn't in the Big Basin Fire: More than 90% of the park’s countless redwoods, which can grow 300 feet tall and live for 2,000 years, survived the fire. Their foot-thick bark warded off flames even as most of the giants are now saddled with large black scars on their trunks. The forest’s Douglas fir and tan oak didn’t fare as well. Large swaths of mountainside are filled with crisp, copper-colored trees and scorched brown earth. Roughly 97% of the 18,000-acre park burned. Still, across much of the forest, new shoots of redwoods and other trees have begun to poke through the moonscape, offering a glimpse of the greening that is sure to accelerate. Room for fire reportage improvement remains. Those young green shoots are more vulnerable to fire than the ...

1987 Animated Short: The Man Who Planted Trees

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Below is a 30-minute film that won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short in 1987. It's set to a famous short story set in France in the 1910's through 1947. But given what we now know about planting trees rejuvenating nearby springs, which we've seen happen in places like North Africa, this story must be based on a true character. It's counter-intuitive that planting trees eventually gets dried springs to flow with water. But in many cases that's what happens. This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License .