About This Book
A nature writer describes finding a vast, venerable yellow pine near a cliff-dwelling mesa, spending many visits beside it, and later witnessing its felling. After the fall he dissects trunk, limbs, and roots to read the tree’s annual rings, identifying 1,047 growth rings that record favorable seasons, droughts, healed wounds, burns, and an early curvature from injury. He traces probable seed dispersal by animals, outlines the tree’s life as a stationary struggle against climate and enemies, and reflects on how rings and wood preserve an individual biography even as human timbering ends that life.
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