As Barbara Walters used to ask, if you were a tree, what kind of tree would you be?
From soaring redwoods in California to aromatic magnolia trees in the South, you have many, many choices.
8 Responses
parrothead2371
20 Dec 2010
bridgiemo
20 Dec 2010
a willow
TURK SEYBEK
20 Dec 2010
a date tree
firespider
20 Dec 2010
I’d be a pine tree. Cool, refreshing, mysterious, and pretty all year around.
Jen L
20 Dec 2010
Never even thought about it.
Redwood I suppose….
Cordova
20 Dec 2010
I think I would be some sort of pine tree in a snow covered forest, preferably higher altitude.
Rolo-Lover 87
20 Dec 2010
At first I thought a Weeping Willow, because this is the tree that I’m most like. Then I thought I would like to be a Mighty Oak, but they are full of NUTS! So I think I would like to be a tree that is strong, resilient and ever growing – yet with pretty, wispy, violet colored blooms and smells absolutely amazing…It has to be the Mimosa Tree!!!
ronnysox60
20 Dec 2010
I am a tree you have never seen b4. I spread through roots popping up every few yards, and growing to the sky, unconcerned with sunshine when small because the tree b4 has light and feeds me until I am once again tall enough to give back to us the true tree which blends in and spreads out covering every inch of the ground and slowly and steadily spreading choking the light from every other plant beneathand filling the soil with dense roots sucking earth dry of her nutriants and mixing them with sunshine and producing rich fruits full of more nutrients which fall to the ground, rot and make the soil even richer as I spread feeding the foul of the air, and the rodents on the ground, who occasionally take seeds outside my immediate area and plant other competing same ones who although they look the same and go by the same name are different and not of the true vine. These others do not share my roots. I am the one true tree first planted and still growing. I am tall, I am deep, I nourish all that falls under my leaves, and shadow out competiion. Who am I.
Magnolia or a Dogwood