Want this question answered?
it is calles hidge and it is a cool green tree I love it
They lived in a house that was made of tree bark.
I can't tell you what it is but i can tell you some of the information of the Kwakiutl Tribe • Location- Pacific Northwest Coast in the Coastal Range region in North America. • Climate- Mild, winds brought Moisture from the ocean. • Clothing- Animal skins and furs or skirts, capes and hoods from bark of cedar tree. • Shelter- Plank Houses made from Cedar Wood. • Food- Deer, Moose, Fish, Seals. (Shellfish and berries for womens diet)
"Alamo" is Spanish for "cottonwood." So, an Alamo tree is a cottonwood tree.
A miniature tree grown in a container. note- spelled bonsai- means dish tree.
it is not
The Pacific Northwest Tree Octopus was an internet hoax created in 1998 by Lyle Zapato.
It comes from the Pacific Northwest region.
Northern California. It is the Great Redwoods.
The Mimosa tree (Albizia julibrissin) also known as Silk Tree or Pink Siris will grow well in warm climates. Hope this helps! See the Related Links for "The Mimosa Tree" to the bottom for the answer.
The Northeast Gutter Snipe ranks highest in gullibility and The Northwest Tree Octopus is second.
There are no monkeys native to the US Pacific Northwest. The tree octopus is said to live exclusively in the forests of western Washington state. The main threat to the tree octopus was from another primate, the Sasquatch, which were said to feed on it. Of course, Sasquatch may not exist, and the tree octopus certainly does not. The Pacific Tree Octopus is a fictional creature created by hoaxsters in 1998 as a parody of ecological websites. Some individuals do still occasionally think the website is a real one.
it is calles hidge and it is a cool green tree I love it
introduction of save the organization
no. the pacific tree frog is a carnivore and eats only spiders and a wide variety of insects.
Tree frogs make up the family Hylidae. The gray tree frog is classified as Hyla versicolor, the Pacific tree frog as Hyla regilla, and the giant tree frog as Litoria infrafrenata.
Donald M Knutson has written: 'Dwarf mistletoe and host tree interactions in managed forests of the Pacific Northwest' -- subject(s): Dwarf mistletoes, Host-parasite relationships