The pot is on the tree in bushes and woods, click it three times
shake the tree three times then pick it up of the ground
Any more than 6 inches and the tree will probably die.
Find out your self u lazy person and stop cheating by looking up answers!!
Pour 1 litre of round up weed killer around the base...... then just wait.
The tree does - it's the root system which doesn't. Tree roots expand outward, and take up a much larger area than the tree trunk.
Well did you stuff the pot up in there or did you just smoke it???? If you stuffed it in there, then yeah, they probably can.
You find the pot in the tree. You have to shake the tree to get it down. Then you fill the pot in the stream. After that, you need to find the cave and clear the rocks in the middle to make a ring. Then find a piece of firewood and rip up the survival guide on top of that. Then befriend the black puffle and feed it an o-berry on top of your fire wood. Then the fire should light. Place the pot on the fire to boil it. Then click it again to drink it.
probrably 1 and a half cup of water.Do you mean how much water a tree TRANSPIRES (takes up and evaporates) or how much it keeps inside the tree body?A mature, large Doug fir can consume up to 800 gallons a day if available but will subsist on far less as necessary (Peter Rennie, RPF Consulting Forester and Arborist).
The trees that are used are pine, fir, spruce ,cedar, hemlock, and others for YOU to look up
The fir tree has a long association with Christianity, it began in Germany almost 1,000 years ago when St Boniface, who converted the German people to Christianity, was said to have come across a group of pagans worshipping an oak tree. In anger, St Boniface is said to have cut down the oak tree and to his amazement a young fir tree sprung up from the roots of the oak tree. St Boniface took this as a sign of the Christian faith. But it was not until the 16th century that fir trees were brought indoors at Christmas time.For the source and more detailed information concerning this issue, click on the related links section indicated below.
It is drawn into the trunk of the tree and pulled up through xylem, one of the two types of transport tissue in trees.