The Massive Continuity of Ducks
  • Tags
  • Compose Clever Questions
Avatar
three-owls-in-a-trenchcoat:

I looked it up and apparently ive never seen a forest older than ~70 years. idk how long I thought those trees had been there but... longer than that.

Avatar
headspace-hotel:

We really need to have different words for different stages of forest, because people think of a forest with tall trees you can walk through as “restored/rehabilitated” habitat even though all the trees in it are Baby. So many people have never actually seen a mature forest—and old forests have unique characteristics and complexity that young ones don’t.

So many species definitely went extinct when we clear cut the Eastern USA.

The time it takes to get to something you would call “woods” is shorter than people think. If you stop maintaining a plot of land when you’re 20, you will have “woods” by the time you’re 40.

I think we both focus on old growth forests too much and not enough. We need to preserve old growth forests, but we shouldn’t count young forests as a casualty or as replaceable either.

I think a big reason why we have so many hostile, lifeless spaces like big swathes of unused lawn grass is that people see “nature” as already “gone” from there—the damage is “already done.”

And I’ve noticed that few people are studying the ecology of these spaces, because nothing could possibly be of value to study in a weedy lawn or a parking lot, right?

But…well, okay, there’s this myth that conservation is all, like, preserving these places like old-growth forests that are being increasingly encroached upon—I mean it’s in the name, conservation—and as a result, people don’t really look at their “developed” surroundings and see something that is a potential site for a restored ecosystem, instead of something already gone to be mourned over. But the conservation victories of the 70’s and 80’s involved turning a lot of poisonous wastelands into the beginnings of pristine ecosystems, and people who don’t know any better will look at these habitats that used to be a smoking crater of capitalist destruction and think “Awww how sad that there are so few of these untouched habitats left…”

The idea of “untouched” nature is its own lie that has a billion problems with it, but that’s another post

    • 1 month ago,
    • 461 notes
    • Via zagreuses-toast
  • nature forest i can walk to 'the woods' but i am aware that the majority of the trees there are young and i'm sure the ground in there isnt what it could be still it's a lovely piece of nature and i am thankful to have access to it

  1. radiogreen reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  2. basedonatruetory reblogged this from koallie2
  3. archtech88 reblogged this from tirlaeyn
  4. archtech88 liked this
  5. jedi-bird reblogged this from tirlaeyn
  6. koallie2 reblogged this from zagreuses-toast
  7. tirlaeyn reblogged this from zagreuses-toast
  8. tirlaeyn liked this
  9. sunbeamseas reblogged this from zagreuses-toast
  10. sunbeamseas liked this
  11. enbymoomin liked this
  12. timetravelbypen reblogged this from eriadu-in-the-wildwood
  13. eriadu-in-the-wildwood reblogged this from zagreuses-toast
  14. imposter1491625 liked this
  15. zagreuses-toast reblogged this from gen-is-gone
  16. zagreuses-toast liked this
  17. gaymelie reblogged this from gen-is-gone
  18. gen-is-gone reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  19. seasparrow18 reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  20. seasparrow18 liked this
  21. nomoremorse liked this
  22. horce-divorce liked this
  23. 0k00 reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  24. kafkasmelomania liked this
  25. kris-seaotter reblogged this from the-most-adorkable-smile
  26. softlyblcssoms liked this
  27. painting-peaks liked this
  28. smallfluffything reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  29. smallfluffything liked this
  30. madpiratebippy liked this
  31. redbowedblogger reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  32. redbowedblogger liked this
  33. this-is-mycrisis liked this
  34. hypothetical-pebble liked this
  35. stars-inthe-sky liked this
  36. stpauligirl reblogged this from dragonlordette
  37. kenaran liked this
  38. iridisentry liked this
  39. woodsfae reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  40. thebroombroom liked this
  41. theblazedbutterfly liked this
  42. browniesthoughts liked this
  43. mem-s-mushrooms liked this
  44. ilovecatsandhatelife liked this
  45. klltsun-25 liked this
  46. el-smacko liked this
  47. holographic-duality liked this
  48. gaychocolatehomicide reblogged this from headspace-hotel
  49. headspace-hotel posted this
    I looked it up and apparently ive never seen a forest older than ~70 years. idk how long I thought those trees had been...
  50. Show more notesLoading...
The Massive Continuity of Ducks © 2014–2023
Basic by Cubthemes