Australians are asleep, post forests from your cunt!
Australians are asleep, post forests from your cunt!
Other urls found in this thread:
researchgate.net
twitter.com
go to sleep europeans
We only have jungles
Valdivian temperate rain forest
It's dinner time in Australia, they're not asleep
it's 8AM
We never sleep.
too many pingaz
>6pm
>alseep
it's best time to sleep again
It's only 5 PM in real Straya hours.
I should go for a hike again
I always have forests as a desktop background image because I find them soothing. Still, nothing beats a real life hike through a forest.
*chirp* *chirp* *chirp*
>board populated almost exclusively by kv neets
>thinking we'd be asleep at 6pm instead of having just woke up fresh for another day of shitposting
>neets
>waking up before 10:00
Only time I've up at 6:00 is if I've stayed up the whole night.
I’m on the dexies no sleep 4 me
why are European trees so skinny?
hnnnnnng
Everything west of Broken Hill may as well be considered a different country, desu.
beatiful luso master race forest
one day WA will secede and go on to form the last bastion of australian culture, and when you're nothing but a service industry based chinese colony, you'll see how fucked you are without our resources and cultural influence.
I remember one year late summer when you could go swimming in the Adriatic at a pretty warm temp and then take a 30 min drive up the mountains and go skiing.
a Quenual forest near the pre-columbian ruins of Japani in the highlands of Lima
Queñuales (Polylepis) are the highest naturally occurring forests in the world, but in this specific case the forest is actually manmade, made during the pre-columbian era and then abandoned as the ruins nearby
in the Inca Empire, andeans used to plant forest near their towns and villages for a variety of purposes, principally for wood, obviously, but also to reduce the danger of landslides and increased water retention
chroniclers writing shortly after the Spanish conquest in the early 1500s report that:
>the Inca had had a strong tradition of tree planting; Alnus cultivation was overseen by the emperor himself, and illegal woodcutting and burning was punishable by death. After conquest, the terraces and trees went into decline. Alnus now grows only in a few remote ravines.
relevant researchgate.net
forest of Intimpa (sun tree), endemic in the Ampay sanctuary