Trees that shed their leaves in the fall and regrow them in the spring are deciduous trees.
The Mighty T Tree
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the Winter.
Any deciduous tree will lose all it's leaves in the autumn.
A hardwood (deciduous) tree has leaves that fall off in the autumn. They can be any size or shape.
You could read Matthew 1 or Luke 2.
To my knowledge, any deciduous tree ( A tree that loses it's leaves in the winter) is considered a hardwood. Even the Tulip Poplar tree that is most often mistaken for a softwood, is a hardwood tree.
An oak tre is deciduous a Christmas tree could be any evergreen.
Well, this depends upon opinion. I don't know of any really odd deciduous trees, but I do know of one tree with strange leaves. It's called the Sassafrass tree. It has three types of leaves! Look it up. I hope this answers your question! --A WikiAnswers user
A conifer is typically an evergreen, it does not drop its' 'leaves' (needles or scales) as do deciduous trees. Blue Spruce, White Pine, and Douglas fir are examples of conifer trees. Think Christmas trees - they are conifers. A conifer is a cone bearing tree. Some conifers are deciduous for example the Larch.
you could collect sap from a maple tree and make syrup. You only need 10 gallons of maple sap to make a quart of syrup! you could Build a tree house if you have time you could just climb a tree for the heck of it you can collect leaves or insects you could also admire fall colors and take pictures It's fun to go for a hike in a deciduous forest It's even more fun to bring a dog on a hike in a deciduous forest. The best is fishing or canoeing or kayaking or rafting Or tubing with beer. pellet guns are great fun in any forest Fishing still sounds the best to me though. Have a camp fire! Jogging is a possibility hunting wild game target practice with a throwing axe play survivor games with friends play paintball
A deciduous forest lives in the same manner as any other type of forest. For instance, a deciduous forest in Britain would lose their leaves in Autumn, so facing the winter asleep. And with bare branches, any heavy (and weighty) winter snowfalls would cause less damage to the tree branches than if the tree kept their leaves throughout the four seasons. Also, from experience, an area of deciduous forest (I have a place in North Wales in mind) will in Autumn produce Autumn colours that produce many photographs and firm memories of natural beauty.
It is like 50 to 60 Degrees for them to grow.