144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome...

24
This huge 125-year-old rhododendron is technically not a tree – most are considered to be shrubs. You can find out more about it here. (Image credits: reddit) 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan

Transcript of 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome...

Page 1: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

This huge 125-year-old rhododendron is technically not a tree – most are considered to be shrubs. You can find out more about it here. (Image credits: reddit)

144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan

Page 2: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Image credits: tungnam.com.hk

Page 3: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

At 1,990 square meters (about half an acre), this huge wisteria is the largest of its kind in Japan. Read more about it here. (Image credits:y-fu)

Page 4: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Wind-Swept Trees In New Zealand

These trees on Slope Point, the southern tip of New Zealand, grow at an angle because they’re constantly buffeted by extreme Antarctic winds. Find out more here. (Image credits: Seabird Nz)

Page 5: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Beautiful Japanese Maple In Portland, Oregon

Image credits: falcor88

Page 6: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Image credits: Tom Schwabel

Antarctic Beech Draped In Hanging Moss In Oregon

Page 7: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

The Antarctic beech is native to Chile and Argentina, though this specimen is from the U.S.’ North Pacific region. (Image credits: Drew Hopper)

Blooming Cherry Trees in Bonn, Germany

Page 8: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin
Page 9: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

This beautiful tunnel of cherry blossoms blooms in Bonn, Germany in April. To see more tunnels like this one, click here. (Image credits: Adas Meliauskas)

Angel Oak In John’s Island In South Carolina

Page 10: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

The Angel Oak in South Carolina stands 66.5 ft (20 m) tall and is estimated to be more than 1400 or 1500 years old. (Image credits:Daniela Duncan)

Flamboyant Tree, Brazil

Page 11: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

The flamboyant tree is endemic to Madagascar, but it grows in tropical areas around the world. (Image credits: Salete T Silva)

Page 12: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Dragonblood Trees, Yemen

The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin varnish, an alchemical ingredient, and a folk remedy for various ailments. (Image credits: Csilla Zelko)

The President, Third-Largest Giant Sequoia Tree In The World, California

Page 13: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin
Page 14: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

President, located in Sequoia National Park in California, stands 241 ft (73m) tall and has a ground circumference of 93 ft (28m). It is the third largest giant sequoia in the world (second if you count its branches in addition to its trunk). (Image credits: Michael Nichols)

Maple Tree Tunnel in Oregon

Page 15: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin
Page 16: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Image credits: Ian Sane

Rainbow Eucalyptus In Kauai, Hawaii

Page 17: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin
Page 18: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Image credits: jwilsonnorton

The rainbow eucalyptus, which grows throughout the South Pacific, is both useful and beautiful. It is prized for both the colorful patches left by its shedding bark and for its pulpwood, which is used to make paper. (Image credits: Christopher Martin)

Page 19: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Jacarandas in Cullinan, South Africa

Page 20: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin
Page 21: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

These beautiful Jacarandas, with their violet flowers, grow in South Africa. (Image credits: Elizabeth Kendall)

Avenue Of Oaks At Dixie Plantation In South Carolina

This avenue of oak trees was planted sometime in the 1790s on Dixie Plantation in South Carolina. (Image credits: Lee Sosby)

Page 22: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Baobab Trees In Madagascar

These baobabs in Madagascar are excellent at storing water in their thick trunks to use during droughts. (Image credits: confitalsurf)

The Dark Hedges In Northern Ireland

Page 23: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin
Page 24: 144-Year-Old Wisteria In Japan · Dragonblood Trees, Yemen The dragonblood tree earned its fearsome name due to its crimson red sap, which is used as a dye and was used as a violin

Image credits: Stephen Emerson

Ireland’s Dark Hedges were planted in the 18th century. This stunning beech tree tunnel was featured on Game of Thrones as well. Read more about it here. (Image credits: Christopher Tait)