In Minnesota, several tree species produce "helicopter" seeds, commonly known as samaras. The most notable among them are maples, particularly the sugar maple and silver maple, which have distinctive winged seeds that spin as they fall. Other trees that produce similar seed structures include the ash and the elm. These seeds are designed for wind dispersal, allowing them to travel away from the parent tree.
Both male and female maple trees can produce helicopters, which are the winged seeds of the tree.
Acer family. Sycamores and Plane trees.
No, helicopters do not look like trees.
Grow up and be mature about it. How can he prevent that.
The Acer Maple tree has seed pods designed to spin like little helicopter blades.
Helicopters, any veriety from Apache to Black Hawk. JK, jk. They are maple seeds.
Pretty much anywhere they please, provided there aren't a lot of trees or power lines in the vicinity.
The helicopters flew over me, searchlights illuminating only trees as I crouched amidst the rubble, blood on my face.
A cheetah lives in rain forests high in the trees
No, there are different trees and they all reproduce differently for example those trees with the helicopters people called them is actually seeds and they fly or float to different areas for they don't need to be in the same area as the 'mother tree' as they call it.
They fly helicopters.
Helicopters are about 200 feet