Post wilderness areas in your cunt

Post wilderness areas in your cunt.

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spiderid.com/locations/india/
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

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Did you know that America has G-R-A-S-S?

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I love flatlands!

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nice

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Ah, gay Paris. Beau, non?

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germany has the most boring landscape world wide

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For those looking to explore Wilderness in India:

1. Western Ghats in the monsoon
2. Himalayan ranges in Summer
3. Odisha Tribal areas in monsoon

Have not been to north east India though. :/

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Europe has a notable lack of biodiversity due to the Ice Age. As the glaciers moved south, plants that could only survive in lowland areas were wiped out--with the barrier of the Pyrenees and Alps, there was nowhere for them to go unlike East Asia and North America where plants retreated to the south of those continents away from the ice and then expanded north as the ice sheets retreated.

Entire plant families are absent from Europe north of the Mediterranean. There are no walnuts, hickories, tulip trees, magnolias, and many others. The plant families that do exist such as oaks, ashes, etc, have significantly fewer species than in North America and Asia.

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Too bad 1.3 billion indians are ruining that whole peninsula, just like the chinese are runing china.
(Europeans ruined Europe a long time ago obviously)

Europe has a marked lack of biodiversity due to the Ice Age. As the glaciers moved south, plants that could only survive in lowland areas were wiped out--with the barrier of the Pyrenees and Alps, there was nowhere for them to go unlike East Asia and North America where plants retreated to the south of those continents away from the ice and then expanded north as the ice sheets retreated.

Entire plant families are absent from Europe north of the Mediterranean. There are no walnuts, hickories, tulip trees, magnolias, and many others. The plant families that do exist such as oaks, ashes, etc, have significantly fewer species than in North America and Asia. For example, there is pretty much just the sessile and English oak while the eastern US has about 50 total species.

Would you recommend the Hindu Kush mountains?

This doesnt even look real.

It is what it is faggot. The progress of man. :/

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that's mostly Pakistan now. Beautiful fucking place though.

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If it's India, I'd rather not. There's probably spiders the size of a dinner plate in them woods.

It is mad, I think I read somewhere that there was more plant diversity on one south African mountain than there was in the entire UK

Darn, I didn't realize it was mostly in Pakistan. I wouldn't go to any remote region there for fear of getting beheaded.

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spiderid.com/locations/india/

And you thought Australian spiders inspired fear.

Here in Norway we are preserving the nature pretty well. But as it happens this is not the most important nature to preserve (ofc all nature is imporant). I think it's crazy that Brazilians and Indians, and other peoples don't do like we do. Even the Swedes and the Finns ruin their nature, you can clearly see that even tho they are few they spread out over the whole place like a disease, just like mainland europeans.

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Stop pontificating. We know all this, of course. We took better care of nature before our contact with the West. I would argue, that it many rural and tribal areas, we still do. With more care and attention than the Western man can make sense of. But now unfortunately, because of the cities and modernity and consumerism we must go full retard before we can come to truly understand once again.

it's sad, there are people fighting the good fight, but there's little we can do about it. The problem's too big and only some greater catastrophe an save us.

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You know the fight is lost when people just laugh when they hear someone say something about preserving the nature. "Haha oh you're one of those people..."

It's illegal to go there tho .

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mt hood is so pretty

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>Next to the smaller sessile oak (Q. petraea), English oak (Q. robur) is one of two mainstay oak species in Europe, its range stretching from Ireland to Russia. In the British Isles, English oak is a way of life and has played an integral part in the nation's history and folklore, perhaps most famously when King Charles II hid in a hollowed-out oak to evade capture. English oak is long lived, on average 300-400 years, but many pollarded trees are over a millenia old.

>The tree averages 70 odd feet (21 meters) in height. It is fast growing, with the majority of growth taking place during the first nine decades. After 80-105 years, growth of English oak slows and becomes almost negligible. By the 16th century, the use of oak in roof panels for Tudor architecture, along with the growing size of naval vessels, put increasing strain on the supply of oaks in the British Isles. Some warships could use as many as 1000 oaks in their construction. By the end of the 16th century, Ireland's primeval forests were largely denuded to supply the English navy and to deny Irish rebels a hiding place.

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Lake Baikal in winter.

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>In 1703, a great storm felled thousands of oaks, and a concerned English government urged large-scale planting of the trees for strategic purposes. The North American colonies were also mined for wood from the continent's vast primeval forests, until the American War of Independence. Royal Society fellow John Evelyn tried futiley to warn against widespread logging for fuel, construction, clearing farmland, and feeding iron furnaces. It was left to the newly formed Royal Society for the Encouragement of the Arts to show the way, by offering prizes to those who planted most trees - supremely the oak - but also the softwood conifers used for masts. Acorn fever took hold. The great Dukes - Bedford above all - vied for planting out acre after acre with oak. Naval officers on leave, like Collingwood, went around surreptitiously scattering acorns from holes in his breeches in the parks of his unsuspecting hosts. And the all-time champion was the lord-lieutenant of Cardiganshire, Colonel Thomas Johnes, who between 1795 and 1801 planted some 922,000 sturdy oaks.

>The event of steam ships in the 19th century made English oak a less vital commodity, but the tree's image as being synonymous to the British way of life remained set in stone.

It's quite surprising that Finland is almost as well lit as France considering the difference in population size.

But then again northern half of the country is practically black.

it'll be funny when it blows though

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mt rainier is spookier, I remember St. Helens and Rainier is supposed to be far worse

same with Rainier

I want Seattle and Portland to go bye bye

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Based

Need to do that with yew sharpish. Also loads of ash are dying out here because of a disease, really glad that rewilding is becoming more of a thing here

I'm hoping for a Crater Lake level of destruction

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Rainier is going to wipe out Seattle but probably not Portland it's too far away

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>Also loads of ash are dying out here because of a disease
They are here too but not because of a disease, but a dastardly insect that presumably arrived in a box of Nike sneakers from a Chinese sweatshop.

I don't think Seattle will be missed all that much desu.

I agree with your Norwegian feels. We do what we can and we hope for the best.

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It's April. They're blooming now, the bastards. A poor excuse for a tree spread around by home centers and landscaping firms into many a park or suburban yard. They're brittle as fuck and break apart easily in storms. Birds eat the small fruits and spread the seeds everywhere where they develop into the East Asian species it was hybridized from, a thorny shrub that chokes out native vegetation.

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U can come and look of u want

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What do you call this sort of forest?

That's a typical temperate deciduous forest, oak, maple, pine... the most common type in the US

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Thanks. Looks pretty cool. i think I have seen similar photos of forests from Germany.

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Cozy.

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What place is this?

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90% of our wilderness is just dense forest
Kind of lacking in the wide vista department

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Just anywhere on the norwegian plateau.
Norway is one big mountain range, and ontop of that there are vast mountain planes (basically planes ontop of the norwegian/ mountain range - norwegian plateau). Then when you get closer to the coasts, the mountain range becomes an alpine-like scenery because that is where the glacier ice during the ice age carved its way down into the sea, like pic related. Fjords and valleys and sharp mountain tops.

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Sweden is very cozy tho

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Another pic from the plateau.

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Looks Siberian.

located right on the northern edge of Seoul

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Rainier would put several large cities and towns in the path of a lahar if it went off.

We lost a ton of species of deciduous trees due to fungi.

I guess northern nature isn't so different eastward in terms of aesthetics? Isn't siberia mostly normal planes tho, instead of elevated planes?

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We dont have wilderness in my cunt
Farmland like this is the closest you get

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Here's a picture of Mount Sneffels in Southern Colorado. Beautiful place, I'd definitely recommend taking the San Juan Skyway to see it.

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Nice. Mountain people are based.

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Both planes and mountains

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