Trees
ParkChat
replying to @InnerCompass @InnerCompass @Wild_Tribute Mmmm. Maple candy. Maple syrup. #parkchat
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute a1 - Nothing like the smell of Pine Trees during a Colorado summer #parkchat
replying to @c2avilez @c2avilez @Wild_Tribute Yeah, they're on a 'short' list of favorites...#parkchat
A1: If I could be a tree I’d be (wait, wasn’t this asked if Doug Williams during Super Bowl Week?). Giant Sequoia #ParkChat
replying to @c2avilez @c2avilez Nothing beats Old Growth! #Preserve&Protect #ParkChat
replying to @NatlParkPodcast @NatlParkPodcast You'd love our home in the #blackhills! We have acres of them! 😁 #parkchat
A1 Gotta go with the bristlecone pine. several thousand years old. imagine if it could talk. Loved them near Wheeler Peak in @GreatBasinNPS #parkchat
A1 The dogwood is my spirit tree. I adopted one when I was five years old and watched it grow throughout my childhood. Don't find many dogwoods in the national parks, though. #ParkChat
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute A1) Both the Coastal Redwoods and Giant Sequoias are trees that if not speak to me they gather my attention more than other trees. #ParkChat
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute A1: I like nice thick conifers. They make for good protection from the elements #parkchat
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute A1: all trees speak to me. But my original favorite was the white pine #ParkChat
replying to @naturetechfam @naturetechfam @Wild_Tribute I have some here in Cali if you want to come visit, lol! #parkchat
A1. Western red cedar--a tree that has provided shelter, food, clothing, and culture for millennia. Plus they smell wonderful. Hi, #ParkChat!
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute A1) #Parkchat The ohia lehua tree, because of the beautiful red flowers! They say if you pick them, it will rain, so no picking them! Found in @Volcanoes_NPS https://t.co/3fXWJPKkio
replying to @wander_filled @wander_filled @GreatBasinNPS Preview of things to come? #ParkChat
RT @DryTortugasFilm: @Wild_Tribute A1) #Parkchat The ohia lehua tree, because of the beautiful red flowers! They say if you pick them, it…
A1) Hello from New York! when I saw this weeping willow tree on the Connecticut River I felt it had a long story to tell. #ParkChat
replying to @mjn126 @mjn126 @Wild_Tribute You are such an "up north" guy, lol! I almost said pine too because we had so many family camping trips up north and they bring me comfort. #parkchat
replying to @mjn126 @mjn126 @Wild_Tribute You're such a Michigander. 😉 LOL And we love that! #parkchat
replying to @InnerCompass @InnerCompass @Wild_Tribute White Oak groves in the Mid-Atlantic give an ancient feel. #parkchat
RT @t_jh2009: @Wild_Tribute A1) Both the Coastal Redwoods and Giant Sequoias are trees that if not speak to me they gather my attention mor…
replying to @RCGibby73 @RCGibby73 4 down Doug Williams. Super Bowl Champion - but I had to live through his "lean" years in Tampa Bay #parkchat
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute A1 The world's largest Sitka spruce on the Olympic Peninsula is a favorite of mine! #parkchat https://t.co/LmeCFgRm1w
replying to @Wild_Tribute @Wild_Tribute A1). California Black Oak. It’s always been my favorite since childhood #ParkChat
I'm doing a bit of multitasking during tonight's #ParkChat by watching the premiere of this video. https://t.co/f1iH80aE5u
replying to @louisbink @louisbink @Wild_Tribute #Parkchat That and the aspens in fall are my others! @RockyNPS
A1 So many special trees, but the Sequoia are the ones tied to my earliest visits to the national parks, and as elaborated by Dayton Duncan in "Seed of the Future", they are a metaphor for the development of the national park idea #parkchat
replying to @treasured_lands @treasured_lands Have you read Bill Tweed's book "King Sequoia"? Bet you'd love it. #ParkChat
I’ve got Joshua trees on the brain, but some cottonwoods at a desert spring also sound sublime #ParkChat
RT @t_jh2009: I'm doing a bit of multitasking during tonight's #ParkChat by watching the premiere of this video. https://t.co/f1iH80aE5u
replying to @cleverwomanNY @cleverwomanNY When I was a kid (many, many years ago), I loved to play under willows. #ParkChat
RT @t_jh2009: I'm doing a bit of multitasking during tonight's #ParkChat by watching the premiere of this video. https://t.co/f1iH80aE5u
RT @treasured_lands: A1 So many special trees, but the Sequoia are the ones tied to my earliest visits to the national parks, and as elabor…
replying to @cleverwomanNY @cleverwomanNY Yes! The other one I was going to mention. Growing up in Queens and a nearby park had them. When I bought my house, that was one of the first trees I planted. #parkchat
replying to @59NationalParks @59NationalParks @GreatBasinNPS A2: I found this tree on a hike on my first ever trip to see the Redwoods in California, I wanted to hit up NorCal for so long and finally made it and this pretty guy greeted me #ParkChat
A2) I took this photo in @ShenandoahNPS late one winter several years ago. I loved they way the windblown snow and ice striped the trees. Also, it reminds me that our parks are beautiful in all seasons. #ParkChat
replying to @SaveTheDesert @SaveTheDesert The welcome site of a cottonwood stand deep in a red rock canyon...a breath of wilderness #ParkChat