Syracuse, N.Y. — Onondaga County plans to cut down 44,000 ash
trees on county property in the next 10 years before the emerald ash borer can kill them.
Travis Glazier, director of the Office of the Environment for Onondaga County, says if that happens, it'll simply take longer to deal with the as many as 47,000
trees on county property that will die because of the invasive insect.
Not exact matches
The groves, in Chiles Valley, a remote northeastern pocket of Napa
County, bear Tuscan and Sicilian
trees (frantoio, leccino, maurino, pendolino, and nocellara de belice); there's also a 130 - year - old cattle and dairy ranch
on the
property.