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Liz
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Feb 12, 2024 12:18PM
That storm was devastating to many trees in Portland! Thanks for reminding us of the importance of trees and books about them.
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Thanks for sharing the suggested tree books! My husband is especially a tree hugger and will share with him! We loved visiting Red Wood National Park on our trip to Oregon last year! Natures beauty at its finest!
Thanks, Lori! I'm so happy to know that Frank is a tree hugger and that you visited the redwoods on your trip to the Northwest. I hope you enjoy the tree books. The three I mentioned have a variety of writing genres from science to fiction.
We can hang our wishes on trees. 😊 Lloyd Reynolds taugh his students to make "weathergrams", hand-calligraphed quotes, hopes and wishes hung on the branches of trees to weather and blow in the breeze, spreading good thoughts! Great books!
My best tree story is when I lived in Tucson, Arizona, and would head north to tree-covered Flagstaff to escape the summer heat. I knew I was close to my goal when the air became cooler and wafted with the smell of pines.Liz Maggio
Well told, Jean -- I feel the energy trees share whenever I'm near them. I've read from a couple authors--Overstory being one of them--regaling the community network of the tree world -- they're definitely a fascinating community.
Thank you for the tree book recommendations Jean. Here in DE, Doug Tallamy (prof at University of DE) is writing tree books also, especially focusing on oaks which are a keystone species supporting hundreds of other creatures. Two of his excellent books are: The Nature of Oaks and Nature's Best Hope.
Oaks definitely support lots of life, including humans. "Wishtree" has an adorable illustration of all the animal families in Red's branches, Red being a red oak.



